Assassination of John F. Kennedy Lies
Truth Behind the Assassination of John F Kennedy.
There are many theories as to who is actually behind the assassination of John F. Kennedy on November 22, 1963.
The conspiracies about the parties involved vary from the Federal Reserve and members of the U.S. government to the Vatican.
Today, seven in ten Americans believe the government’s official story that Lee Harvey Oswald acted alone.
Within two hours of the shooting, Oswald was taken into custody.
His arrest was not for assassinating the president but for shooting and killing a Dallas policeman.
Two days later Oswald was killed while in police custody by Jack Ruby, a man many say was a government plant.
The Warren Commission investigation of the evidence later concluded that Oswald was not involved in a conspiracy to assassinate the president. The Commission insisted that he acted alone.
In 1979, the House Select Committee on Assassinations (HSCA) studied the Warren Commission version of events.
They found that the assassination was the result of a conspiracy, saying the Warren Commission did not adequately investigate the possibility.
Other official reports, including the Ramsey Clark Panel and the Rockefeller Commission, both supported the Warren Commission version.
So Many Inconsistencies, so Little Time
The Secret Service Agents on the scene were delayed in their reaction to the assassination of John F Kennedy.
This may, in part, be due to the fact that many of them spent the night before in a bar called The Cellar, which happened to be owned by an acquaintance of Jack Ruby.
During his interrogation, Lee Harvey Oswald was denied legal representation and regular protocol was not followed.
He was questioned for hours. Witnesses in the Dealey Plaza inform of a different scenario than that of the official report of the Warren Commission.
Some witnesses say that the shots fired came from the grassy knoll nearby. The firing was not from the Texas School Book Depository.
A cloud of smoke was visible in the area of the grassy knoll. Before the motorcade arrived, men were seen in downtown Dallas with rifles.
Many witnesses encountered mysterious Secret Service men in Dealey Plaza whose presence was unexplained.
Years later Dallas Police Chief Jesse Curry admitted that there was no actual proof that Oswald fired the rifle.
No one has been able to definitively put him in the building with the gun in his hand.
Oswald told police that he was having lunch on the first floor of the Depository at the time of the assassination of John F. Kennedy.
The Invisible Man
Many people do not know or have ever heard of a third wounded man at the assassination of John F Kennedy by the name of James Tague.
He was standing near the Triple Underpass ahead of the motorcade and was wounded by a stray bullet.
The third victim dispels the already ludicrous version of the magic bullet which the Warren Commission sustained.
This theory claims the bullet supposedly caused the severe wounds of Kennedy and Connally.
A Long Line of Coincidental Casualties?
There are photos of two suspicious men standing behind the fence at the Grassy Knoll.
One of them is filmed carrying a rifle during the assassination of John F Kennedy.
These men were never mentioned and no effort was made to find them by the Warren Commission.
Within the three years following the assassination of JFK and the murder of Oswald, 18 material witnesses died, six by gunfire, three in car accidents, three from heart attacks, two committed suicide, two from natural causes one had their throat cut, and one received a fatal karate chop to the neck. Powerful people appear to want the truth hidden.