That's just not true. He references all previously discussed injuries in his general discussion of the systems of the body.
Under CARDIOVASCULAR SYSTEM he says this:
Apart from previously described traumatic injury of the superior vena cava and the carotid artery, no other vascular abnormalities are identified.
Under NECK he says this:
There is extensive sharp force injury of the upper airway as previously described. Due to
4020
decomposition, there are no demonstrable remaining hemorrhages in the strap muscles or soft tissues of the neck. The upper airway is traumatized but patent.
So he mentions all the injuries listed in the first part of his report as he goes through each system of the body.
But, under NERVOUS SYSTEM he says this:
The dura mater and falx cerebri are intact. There is good preservation of cerebral symmetry with diffuse green-gray softening of parenchyma due to decomposition. Multiple serial sections of autolyzed brain do not reveal the presence of grossly apparent trauma, foreign bodies, or previously existing natural disease. The atlanto-occipital articulation is grossly normal.
So he doesn't mention any injury to the brain. He doesn't mention any injury in his first discussion of the brain or in his discussion here under the systems. He says nothing about the right frontal lobe.
In his summary, he says Travis died of " sharp force trauma of the neck and torso." In other words, he died of stab wounds to the neck and chest. In his summary he says of the gun shot wound:
There was a single penetrating gunshot wound of the head with injuries of the skull and face.
Again, in his summary he says nothing about the existence of any brain injuries, just injuries of the skull and face.
IMO
http://cnninsession.files.wordpress.com/2012/10/redactedtravisautopsy.pdf
I like how you leave out the first 2 lines of the Nervous System section of his report and act like they don't exsist.
In all of the examples you give, he states "as previously described". Which is what he says in the Nervous System exam. I sorry you are having trouble with this, but I don't see your point.
Basic anatomy of the skull and brain dictate that an object passing through the R Anterior Fossa will pass through the R Frontal Lobe. No way around it. Just because the path cannot be identified due to the brain decaying doesn't mean it didn't happen. It also cannot enter the skull without puncturing the Dura Mater. The rest of the Dura Mater is intact as he describes in the rest of the Nervous System review. He had excluded the "previously described" injuries, and was looking at the rest of the system.
Where the bullet re-entered the facial skeleton made the gunshot wound a facial injury. Again, what is your point with this. To get from point A (the entrance wound in the Frontal Bone) to point B (the Ethmoid Bone at midline of the inferior Cranial Vault where the bullet re-entered the facial skeleton) it had to pass through the brain. Once again, it is basic anatomy. Anyone at his level should understand that, and not have to have it explained to them.