http://www.lewrockwell.com/pr/jfk-shooting-analysis.html
June 14, 2010
Introduction to JFK: The Analysis of a Shooting: The Ultimate
Ballistics Truth Exposed.
What really happened in Dealey Plaza on the afternoon of November 22,
1963? I can tell you with complete assurance that what transpired in
Dallas on that fateful day has not yet been concretely established.
The writing of this book has the potential to change that particular prospect.
Why was there a need for this book to be written? This book needed to
be written for a number of reasons. First and foremost, after looking
at the evidence gathered and made public regarding the murder of
President Kennedy for nearly three years I arrived at certain
conclusions that were sternly contradictory to what has been
officially disclosed. Secondly, by exposing the conclusions that I
had arrived at, perhaps another President would not be assassinated
under the same dubious circumstances in our future. And lastly, after
reaching my conclusions, knowing that the real assassins of President
Kennedy were never discovered was enough motivation for me to begin
this process.
What do we know about the assassination of President Kennedy? We know
what we have been officially told by the Warren Commission. The
Commission ultimately concluded that Lee Harvey Oswald took three
shots at the President, from the southeast window of the sixth floor
of the Texas School Book Depository. Oswald allegedly employed a
MannlicherCarcano, World War IIvintage 6.5-mm Italian bolt-action
rifle to do the shooting.
The paramount principle of the Commission's conclusions is that
Oswald was the lone gunman who fired at the President. Another
fundamental conclusion of the Commission is the notion that Oswald
only had time to fire three shots. After a detailed and complete
analysis of the ballistic, medical and film evidence gathered from
the shooting I can declare, with the strongest conviction, that the
undeniable ballistic indication is that three gunmen fired five shots
at President Kennedy. These men took their shots from varied
distances and heights around Dealey Plaza.
After so many years and so much speculation that has taken place it
has become nearly impossible to separate fact from fiction regarding
the murder of President Kennedy. Considering all the testimony
rendered and all the declarations made concerning the event we can no
longer tell who might have made official statements that were less
than factual, and who actually stated the truth. I would surmise what
we have been told regarding the assassination, officially and
otherwise, as a mixture of questionable declarations, and perhaps
some basic truths.
For a long time I had harbored the suspicion that the shooting of
President Kennedy could not have happened as it had been disclosed. A
long time ago, on a weekend, a program came on television concerning
the assassination of the President. The documentary was shown on the
History Channel, and Peter Jennings narrated it. As I watched the
telecast I began to realize that some of the details of the shooting
stated during the broadcast sounded vague, and were perhaps not
entirely factual. The program featured the complete footage of the
Zapruder film. After watching this program my previous suspicions
regarding the assassination of President Kennedy were essentially
confirmed. I began having serious doubts as to what had been
officially disclosed concerning the shooting.
By the time of the telecast I had already begun initial research into
the President's assassination, mainly the particulars of the second
shot fired. It was the viewing of this program, which I quickly found
to be obviously misleading and erroneous in part, that sealed my
commitment to a complete analysis.
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