Assassination of JFK Investigated in the Warren Commission
Assassination of JFK Documented In The Warren Commission.
The assassination of JFK is one of the most widely controversial topics in American history, as is the case whenever there is a governmental cover-up.
Without concrete proof that the JFK assassination was a government conspiracy, we can only make guesses as to what actually happened or who was involved, but there is evidence indicating that most of what the official report says is false.
Even officials at the highest level will agree that the Warren Commission, a group established to investigate the death of JFK, was completely wrong on almost every account of their report.
The Warren Commission states that the first bullet hit JFK in the base of the neck, and exited his throat.
They affirm that this very same bullet then travelled to Governor Connally and hit his back, shattering a rib.
At this point, this same bullet would exit Governor Connally’s chest, pass through his wrist, break many bones in the process, and then finally stop in his left thigh.
And yet this same bullet, when removed from the Governor at the hospital, was in near pristine condition, after having traveled through two bodies and breaking several bones in the process.
This is the ‘single bullet’ theory that ”explains” the eight wounds that occurred that day of the assassination of JFK. Sound implausible?
It sounds implausible because it is implausible. But the Warren Commission maintains the single bullet theory.
The Warren Commission was a team of people that JFK’s Vice President, Lyndon B. Johnson developed to investigate the crime.
Lyndon Johnson developed the Commission not because he wanted an investigation, but because he had to, otherwise it would have looked REALLY bad for him.
Lyndon Johnson Admits Coverup
An ounce of common sense is all that you need to understand that the Warren Commission report is ridiculous regarding the asassination of JFK.
The Warren Commission was a team of JFK’s worst enemies. John McCloy, Congressman Hale Boggs, Senator John Sherman Cooper, and J. Edgar Hoover of the FBI to name but a few.
MANY members of the Warren Commission have since stated that at least seven members of the Commission strongly doubted their own findings.
This may be partly due to the fact that the conclusions found in the Warren Commission simply do not agree with the evidence collected.
What we know about the assassination of JFK as reported by eyewitness testimony is the following: There were 266 eyewitnesses that viewed the actual assassination.
The Warren Commission only interviewed 126 of those. Of those 126 witnesses, 51 of them said that the grassy knoll was where the shots came from.
And 32 said ‘yes’ when asked ‘did the shots come from the Texas School Book Depository?’
Note that those 32 did not say that the shots came from the Book Depository.
Note that those 32 citizens were average Americans who had just witnessed their President being assassinated, and were being grilled by high level governmental executives.
It is possible that, under duress, they were led to believe what the government wanted them to.
Of the remaining witnesses, 38 were unable to offer an opinion, and five of them directly stated that the gunshots came from at least three locations in Dealey Plaza.
Outside of the Warren Commission, two police officers from Dallas reported interviewing two men on the grassy knoll who had been carrying Secret Service identification.
When the Secret Service organization was questioned about the cause for their presence, the Secret Service stated that no agents were assigned to any grassy area in Dealey Plaza, nor were there any in the Plaza directly after the shooting, which was when the police officers questioned the alleged Agents.
The Assassination Records Review Board as initiated by President Clinton in 1998 examined post-mortem evidence records of JFK’s body, and found the records to be incomplete.
These records, had they been completed properly, would have been able to clarify any mystery on the origin of the head wound–was it from the back, or from the front. But those records disappeared.
To date, there is no record of evidence that supports anything from the Warren Commission.
Though findings are not conclusive due to the amount of evidence that has ‘disappeared,’ evidence of the assassination of JFK may not be conclusive, but if nothing else, contradicts the Warren Commission.
Even the people that wrote the Warren Report don’t buy it.
So what really happened? Will we ever know? We have investigated more. Read the Debt to Success System review of all of the banking cartel crimes.