Assassination of President John F. Kennedy
On Friday, November 22, 1963 while on a political campaigning visit to Texas, the President John Fitzgerald Kennedy was assassinated on the streets of downtown Dallas. Shortly after the assassination of President Kennedy, then President Lyndon B. Johnson ordered an investigation of the assassination by a committee made of members selected by President Johnson. This committee, known as the Warren Commission, concluded that a lone assassin named Lee Harvey Oswald committed the murder alone. Since the findings of the Warren Commission, many discrepancies have been discovered in its findings leading to the many various conspiracy theories that have evolved in the 41 years since President Kennedy's death. These conspiracy theories can be found in the many books written by various authors, several television specials that have been aired, also a major motion picture titled J.F.K. by director Oliver Stone in 1991.President John F. Kennedy, the 35th President of the United States of America was nearing the end of his first term in office from which he was elected in 1960 when he went to Texas in 1963. The purpose of the Texas trip was to gain support from the state that the majority was for the Republican Party in the 1960 electi
From Main Street, the motorcade turned right on Houston Street, traveled a short distance until it turned left onto Elm Street in front of the Texas School Book Depository. During the trial Garrison presented several witnesses who were present in Dealey Plaza the day of the assassination, who were never called by the Warren Commission to testify, who stated that the shots were fired from the "grassy knoll" that was in front of President Kennedy's limousine. The general public, until shown by Jim Garrison during the trial of Clay Shaw, had not viewed the Zapruder film, showing the graphic last moments of President Kennedy's life. To say that I am an enthusiast who seeks more knowledge as to what occurred in Dallas on November 22, 1963 is an understatement. On November 22, 1963, President Kennedy arrived in Dallas at Love Field after a brief flight from Fort Worth Texas. Zapruder filmed the presidential motorcade as it passed his position that he was standing in the area of the grassy knoll. I can only hope that in my lifetime, either some federal government agency, or individual comes forward with evidence that will allow us to know why President John F. Although Clay Shaw was later found not guilty, Jim Garrison had introduced evidence into court, which directly disputed the Warren Commission findings. 116) This left one more bullet to account for the remaining wounds in President Kennedy and Governor Connelly. According to the Warren Commission, one bullet struck President Kennedy in the head, and one bullet missed, and stuck a bystander by the name of James Tague, who was standing in front of the Triple Underpass just prior to the entrance to the Stemmons Freeway. Nichols came after the review of the best, and most famous, made filming of the actual assassination of President Kennedy by Abraham Zapruder, which came to be known as The Zapruder Film. Conclusion Although there are so many other facts and theories that exist that were not covered in this essay, the facts that have been shown here would lead any prudent person to have to concede that there was some sort of conspiracy and / or cover up in the assassination of President Kennedy. However rather than admitting to a conspiracy, the Warren Commission determined that one bullet, which came to be known in lore as the "magic bullet" caused seven injuries to President Kennedy and Governor Connelly and was later to be recovered undamaged on a stretcher at Parkland Hospital where President Kennedy was pronounced dead and Governor Connelly was treated.
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