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Assassination of John F. Kennedy

On November 22, 1963, John F. Kennedy, the 35th president of the United States, was assassinated while riding in a presidential motorcade through Dealey Plaza in Dallas, Texas. Kennedy was in the vehicle with his wife, Jacqueline, Texas Governor John Connally, and Connally's wife, Nellie, when he was fatally shot from the nearby Texas School Book Depository by former U.S. Marine Lee Harvey Oswald. The motorcade rushed to Parkland Memorial Hospital, where Kennedy was pronounced dead about 30 minutes after the shooting; Connally was also wounded in the attack but recovered. Vice President Lyndon B. Johnson was hastily sworn in as president two hours and eight minutes later aboard Air Force One at Dallas Love Field.

Assassination of John F. Kennedy
President John F. Kennedy, his wife Jacqueline, Texas governor John Connally, and Connally's wife Nellie in the presidential limousine minutes before the assassination in Dallas
LocationDealey Plaza in Dallas, Texas, U.S.
DateNovember 22, 1963; 60 years ago (1963-11-22)
12:30 p.m. (CST)
TargetJohn F. Kennedy
Weapons
Deaths
Injured
PerpetratorLee Harvey Oswald
ChargesMurder with malice (2 counts, murdered before trial)

After the assassination, Oswald returned home to retrieve a pistol; he shot and killed lone Dallas policeman J. D. Tippit shortly afterwards. Around 70 minutes after Kennedy and Connally were shot, Oswald was apprehended by the Dallas Police Department and charged under Texas state law with the murders of Kennedy and Tippit. At 11:21 a.m. on November 24, 1963, as live television cameras covered Oswald's being moved through the basement of Dallas Police Headquarters, he was fatally shot by Dallas nightclub operator Jack Ruby. Like Kennedy, Oswald was taken to Parkland Memorial Hospital, where he soon died. Ruby was convicted of Oswald's murder, though the decision was overturned on appeal, and Ruby died in prison in 1967 while awaiting a new trial.

After a 10-month investigation, the Warren Commission concluded that Oswald assassinated Kennedy, and that there was no evidence that either Oswald or Ruby was part of a conspiracy. In 1967, New Orleans District Attorney Jim Garrison brought the only trial for Kennedy's murder, against businessman Clay Shaw; Shaw was acquitted. Subsequent federal investigations—such as the Rockefeller Commission and Church Committee—agreed with the Warren Commission's general findings. In its 1979 report, the United States House Select Committee on Assassinations (HSCA) concluded that Kennedy was likely "assassinated as a result of a conspiracy". The HSCA did not identify possible conspirators, but concluded that there was "a high probability that two gunmen fired at [the] President". The HSCA's conclusions were largely based on a police Dictabelt recording later debunked by the U.S. Justice Department.

Kennedy's assassination is still the subject of widespread debate and has spawned many conspiracy theories and alternative scenarios; polls found that a majority of Americans believed there was a conspiracy. The assassination left a profound impact and was the first of four major assassinations during the 1960s in the United States, coming two years before the assassination of Malcolm X in 1965, and five years before the assassinations of Martin Luther King Jr. and Kennedy's brother Robert in 1968. Kennedy was the fourth U.S. president to be assassinated and is the most recent to have died in office.

Background

Kennedy

 
Kennedy delivering his "We choose to go to the Moon" speech at Rice University, 1962

In 1960, John F. Kennedy, then a U.S. senator from Massachusetts, was elected the 35th president of the United States with Lyndon B. Johnson as his vice presidential running mate.[1][2][3][4]

Kennedy's tenure saw the height of the Cold War, and much of his foreign policy was dedicated to countering the Soviet Union and communism.[5][6] As president, he authorized operations to overthrow Fidel Castro's communist government in Cuba,[7] which culminated in the failed Bay of Pigs Invasion in 1961, during which he declined to directly involve American troops.[8] The following year, Kennedy deescalated the Cuban Missile Crisis, an incident widely regarded as the closest that humanity has come to nuclear holocaust.[9]

In 1963, Kennedy decided to travel to Texas to smooth over frictions in the state's Democratic Party between liberal U.S. Senator Ralph Yarborough and conservative Governor John Connally.[10][11] The visit was first agreed upon by Kennedy, Johnson, and Connally during a meeting in El Paso in June.[12] The motorcade route was finalized on November 18 and announced soon thereafter.[13] Kennedy also viewed the Texas trip as an informal launch of his 1964 reelection campaign.[14]

Oswald

 
Lee Harvey Oswald (center) and others distributing pro-Castro leaflets in New Orleans, August 16, 1963.
 
A photograph of Oswald posing with his rifle, holstered pistol, and communist literature[note 1]

Lee Harvey Oswald (born 1939)[17] was a former U.S. Marine who had served in Japan and the Philippines and had espoused communism since reading Karl Marx at the age of 14.[18][19][20] After accidentally shooting his elbow with an unauthorized handgun and fighting an officer, Oswald was court-martialed twice and demoted.[19] In September 1959, he received a dependency discharge after claiming his mother was disabled.[21] A 19-year-old Oswald sailed on a freighter from New Orleans to France and then traveled to Finland, where he was issued a Soviet visa.[22]

Oswald defected to the Soviet Union,[23][note 2] and in January 1960 he was sent to work at a factory in Minsk, Belarus.[26][27] In 1961, he met and married Marina Prusakova,[28] with whom he had a child.[29] In 1962, he returned to the United States with a repatriation loan from the U.S. Embassy.[29] He settled in the Dallas/Fort Worth area,[30] where he socialized with Russian émigrés—notably George de Mohrenschildt.[31][32] In March 1963, a bullet narrowly missed General Edwin Walker at his Dallas residence; a witness observed two conspicuous men. Relying on Marina's testimony, a note left by Oswald, and ballistic evidence, the Warren Commission attributed this assassination attempt to Oswald.[33]

In April 1963, Oswald returned to his birthplace, New Orleans,[34] and established an independent chapter of the pro-Castro Fair Play for Cuba Committee, of which he was the sole member.[35][36] While passing out pro-Castro literature alongside unknown compatriots, Oswald was arrested after scuffling with anti-Castro Cuban exiles.[37][38][note 3] In late September 1963, Oswald traveled to Mexico City, where, according to the Warren Commission, he visited the Soviet and Cuban embassies.[40] On October 3, Oswald returned to Dallas and found work at the Texas School Book Depository on Dealey Plaza.[41] During the workweek he lived separately from Marina at a Dallas rooming house.[42] On the morning of the assassination, he carried a long package (which he told coworkers contained curtain rods) into the Depository;[43][note 4] the Warren Commission concluded that this package contained Oswald's disassembled rifle.[46]

November 22

Kennedy's arrival in Dallas and route to Dealey Plaza

 
President Kennedy and First Lady Jacqueline Kennedy arriving at Dallas Love Field on November 22, 1963.
 
The route of Kennedy's motorcade through Dealey Plaza. The shooting occurred on Elm Street.

On November 22, Air Force One arrived at Dallas Love Field at 11:40 a.m.[47] President Kennedy and the First Lady boarded a 1961 Lincoln Continental convertible limousine to travel to a luncheon at the Dallas Trade Mart.[48][13] Other occupants of this vehicle—the second in the motorcade—were Secret Service Agent Bill Greer, who drove; Special Agent Roy Kellerman in the front passenger seat; and Governor Connally and his wife Nellie, who sat just forward of the Kennedys.[49][50] Four Dallas police motorcycle officers accompanied the Kennedy limousine.[51] Vice President Johnson, his wife Lady Bird, and Senator Yarborough rode in another convertible.[52]

The motorcade's meandering 10-mile route through Dallas was designed to give Kennedy maximum exposure to crowds by passing through a suburban section of Dallas,[48][13] and Main Street in Downtown Dallas, before turning right on Houston Street. After another block, the motorcade was to turn left onto Elm Street, pass through Dealey Plaza, and travel a short segment of the Stemmons Freeway to the Trade Mart.[13] The planned route had been reported in newspapers several days in advance.[13] Despite concerns about hostile protestors—Kennedy's UN Ambassador Adlai Stevenson had been spat on in Dallas a month earlier—Kennedy was greeted warmly by enthusiastic crowds.[53][54][55]

Shooting

 
Dealey Plaza in 2006, with Elm Street on the right and the Triple Underpass in the middle. The white concrete pergola, from which Zapruder was filming, is at the center, behind the lamp-post, and the Grassy Knoll is slightly to its left. The red building partially visible at the extreme upper right is the Texas School Book Depository. Kennedy's motorcade moved from right to left, and Kennedy was struck by the final bullet just left of the lamp-post in front of the pergola.
 
 
Robert Croft's photograph of Kennedy in Dealey Plaza, before the first shot struck Kennedy (left), and the Mary Moorman photograph (right), taken a fraction of a second after the fatal shot.

Kennedy's limousine entered Dealey Plaza at 12:30 p.m. CST.[3] Nellie Connally turned and commented to Kennedy, who was sitting behind her, "Mr. President, they can't make you believe now that there are not some in Dallas who love and appreciate you, can they?" Kennedy's reply – "No, they sure can't" – were his last words.[56]

From Houston Street, the limousine made the planned left turn onto Elm, passing the Texas School Book Depository.[57] As it continued down Elm Street, multiple shots were fired: about 80% of the witnesses recalled hearing three shots.[58] The Warren Commission concluded that three shots were fired and noted that most witnesses recalled that the second and third shots were bunched together.[59] Shortly after Kennedy began waving, some witnesses heard the first gunshot, but few in the crowd or motorcade reacted, many interpreting the sound as a firecracker or backfire.[60][61][note 5]

 
 
Per the Warren Commission's single-bullet theory (top), one bullet caused Kennedy's nonfatal wound and Connally's wounds. Conspiracy theorists, neglecting that Kennedy was not directly behind Connally, claim that the trajectory required a "magic bullet" (bottom).[63]

Within one second of each other, Governor Connally and Mrs. Kennedy turned abruptly from their left to their right.[64] Connally—an experienced hunter—immediately recognized the sound as that of a rifle and turned his head and torso rightward, noting nothing unusual behind him.[62] He testified that he could not see Kennedy, so he started to turn forward again (turning from his right to his left), and that when his head was facing about 20 degrees left of center,[65] he was struck in his upper right back by a shot he did not hear,[65][66] then shouted, "My God. They're going to kill us all!"[67]

According to the Warren Commission and the HSCA, Kennedy was waving to the crowds on his right when a shot entered his upper back and exited his throat just beneath his larynx.[68][69] He raised his elbows and clenched his fists in front of his face and neck, then leaned forward and leftward. Mrs. Kennedy, facing him, put her arms around him.[65][70][71] Although a serious wound, it likely would have been survivable.[72]

According to the Warren Commission's single-bullet theory—derided as the "magic bullet theory" by conspiracy theorists—Governor Connally was injured by the same bullet that exited Kennedy's neck. The bullet created an oval-shaped entry wound near his right shoulder, struck and destroyed several inches of Connally's right fifth rib, and exited his chest just below his right nipple, puncturing and collapsing his lung. That same bullet then entered his arm just above his right wrist and shattered his right radius bone. The bullet exited just below the wrist at the inner side of his right palm and finally lodged in his left thigh.[73][74][72]

 
 
The trajectories of the two bullets that struck Kennedy, per the House Select Committee on Assassinations.

As the limousine passed the grassy knoll,[75] Kennedy was struck a second time, by a fatal shot to the head.[76] The Warren Commission made no finding as to whether this was the second or third bullet fired, and concluded—as did the HSCA—that the second shot to strike Kennedy entered the rear of his head. It then passed in fragments through his skull, creating a large, "roughly ovular" [sic] hole on the rear, right side of the head, and spraying blood and fragments. His brain and blood spatter landed as far as the following Secret Service car and the motorcycle officers.[77][78][79][note 6]

Secret Service Agent Clint Hill was riding on the running board of the car immediately behind Kennedy's limousine.[81] Hill testified to the Warren Commission that he heard one shot, jumped onto the street, and ran forward to board the limousine and protect Kennedy. Hill stated that he heard the fatal headshot as he reached the Lincoln, "approximately five seconds" after the first shot that he heard.[82] After the headshot, Mrs. Kennedy began climbing onto the limousine's trunk, but she later had no recollection of doing so.[83] Hill believed she may have been reaching for a piece of Kennedy's skull.[82] He jumped onto the limousine's bumper, and he clung to the car as it exited Dealey Plaza and sped to Parkland Memorial Hospital. After Mrs. Kennedy crawled back into her seat, both Governor and Mrs. Connally heard her repeatedly saying: "They have killed my husband. I have his brains in my hand."[65][84][85]

Bystander James Tague received a minor wound to the cheek—either from bullet or concrete curb fragments—while standing by the triple underpass.[86] Nine months later, the FBI removed the curb, and spectrographic analysis revealed metallic residue consistent with the lead core in Oswald's ammunition.[87] Tague testified before the Warren Commission and initially stated that he was wounded by either the second or third shot of the three shots that he remembered hearing. When the commission counsel pressed him to be more specific, Tague testified that he was wounded by the second shot.[88]

Aftermath in Dealey Plaza

 
Bill and Gayle Newman shielding their children after hearing shots and dropping to the grass. The grassy knoll and its picket fence are visible in the background.[note 7]

As the motorcade left Dealey Plaza, some witnesses sought cover,[90] and others joined police officers to run up the grassy knoll in search of a shooter.[75][91] No shooter was found behind the knoll's picket fence.[92] Among the 178 witnesses who testified to the Warren Commission, 78 were unsure of the shots' origin, 49 believed they came from the Depository, and 21 thought they came from the grassy knoll.[93] No witness ever reported seeing anyone — with or without a gun (except policemen) — immediately behind the knoll's picket fence at the time of the shooting.[92]

Lee Bowers was in a two-story railroad switch tower 120 yards (110 m) behind the grassy knoll's picket fence; he was watching the motorcade and had an unobstructed view of the only route by which any shooter could flee the grassy knoll; he saw no one leaving the scene.[92] Bowers testified to the Warren Commission that "one or two" men were between him and the fence during the assassination: one was a familiar parking lot attendant and the other wore a uniform like a county courthouse custodian. He testified seeing "some commotion" on the grassy knoll at the time of the assassination: "something out of the ordinary, a sort of milling around, but something occurred in this particular spot which was out of the ordinary, which attracted my eye for some reason which I could not identify".[94][note 8]

At 12:36 p.m., teenager Amos Euins approached Dallas police Sergeant D.V. Harkness to report having seen a "colored man ... leaning out of the window [with] a rifle" on the sixth floor of the Depository during the assassination; in response, Harkness radioed that he was sealing off the Depository.[96] Witness Howard Brennan then approached a police inspector to report seeing a shooter—a white man in khaki clothing—in the same window.[97][98] Police broadcast Brennan's description of the man at 12:45 p.m.[99] Brennan testified that, after the second shot, "This man ... was aiming for his last shot ... and maybe paused for another second as though to assure himself that he had hit his mark."[100] Witness James R. Worrell Jr. also reported seeing a gun barrel emerge from a sixth floor Depository window.[101] Bonnie Ray Williams, who was on the fifth floor of the Depository, stated that the rifle's report was so loud and near that ceiling plaster fell onto his head.[102]

Oswald's flight, killing of J. D. Tippit, and arrest

 
 
The view of the Texas School Book Depository from witness Howard Brennan: circle "A" indicates where he saw Oswald firing a rifle. At right, the view from the "sniper's nest" in the Texas School Book Depository.

When searching the sixth floor of the Depository, two deputies found an Italian Carcano M91/38 bolt-action rifle.[103][note 9] Oswald had purchased the used rifle the previous March under the alias "A. Hidell" and had it delivered to his Dallas P.O. box.[105] The FBI found Oswald's partial palm print on the barrel,[106][107][note 10] and fibers on the rifle were consistent with those of Oswald's shirt.[110] A bullet found on Governor Connally's hospital gurney and two fragments found in the limousine were ballistically matched to the Carcano.[111]

Oswald left the Depository and traveled by bus to his boarding house, where he retrieved a jacket and revolver.[112] At 1:12 p.m., police officer J. D. Tippit spotted Oswald walking in the residential neighborhood of Oak Cliff and called him to his patrol car. After an exchange of words, Tippit exited his vehicle; Oswald then shot Tippit three times in the chest. As Tippit lay on the ground, Oswald fired a final shot into Tippit's right temple. Oswald then calmly walked away before running as witnesses emerged.[113]

Oswald speaking in custody
  Oswald professing innocence
  Oswald's "press conference"

As Dallas police officers conducted a roll call of Depository employees, Oswald's supervisor Roy Truly realized that Oswald was absent and notified the police.[114] Based on a false identification of Oswald, Dallas police raided a library in Oak Cliff before realizing their mistake.[115] At 1:36 p.m., the police were called after a conspicuous Oswald, tired from running, was seen sneaking into the Texas Theatre without paying.[116] With the film War Is Hell still playing, Dallas policemen arrested Oswald after a brief struggle in which Oswald drew his fully loaded gun.[117] He denied shooting anyone and claimed he was being made a "patsy" because he had lived in the Soviet Union.[118]

Kennedy declared dead; Johnson sworn in

 
Cecil Stoughton's photograph of Lyndon B. Johnson being sworn in as President as Air Force One prepares to depart Love Field in Dallas. Jacqueline Kennedy, still in her Chanel suit (the blood spatters not visible here), looks on.

At 12:38 p.m., Kennedy arrived in the emergency room of Parkland Memorial Hospital.[119] Although Kennedy was still breathing after the shooting, his personal physician, George Burkley, immediately saw that survival was impossible.[120][121][122] After Parkland surgeons performed futile cardiac massage, Kennedy was pronounced dead at 1:00 p.m., 30 minutes after the shooting.[121] CBS host Walter Cronkite broke the news on live television.[123][124]

The Secret Service was concerned about the possibility of a larger plot and urged Johnson to leave Dallas and return to the White House, but Johnson refused to do so without any proof of Kennedy's death.[125][note 11] Johnson returned to Air Force One around 1:30 p.m., and shortly thereafter, he received telephone calls from advisors McGeorge Bundy and Walter Jenkins advising him to depart for Washington, D.C., immediately.[127] He replied that he would not leave Dallas without Jacqueline Kennedy and that she would not leave without Kennedy's body.[125][127] According to Esquire, Johnson did "not want to be remembered as an abandoner of beautiful widows".[127]

At the time of Kennedy's assassination, the murder of a president was not under federal jurisdiction.[128] Accordingly, Dallas County medical examiner Earl Rose insisted that Texas law required him to perform an autopsy.[129][130] A heated exchange between Kennedy's aides and Dallas officials nearly erupted into a fistfight before the Texans yielded and allowed Kennedy's body to be transported to Air Force One.[129][130][131] At 2:38 p.m., with Jacqueline Kennedy at his side, Johnson was administered the oath of office by federal judge Sarah Tilghman Hughes aboard Air Force One shortly before departing for Washington with Kennedy's coffin.[132]

Immediate aftermath

Autopsy

Where bungled autopsies are concerned, President Kennedy's is the exemplar.

— Dr. Michael Baden, chairman of the forensic pathology panel of the House Select Committee on Assassinations[133]

President Kennedy's autopsy was performed at Bethesda Naval Hospital in Maryland on the night of November 22. Jacqueline Kennedy had selected a naval hospital as the postmortem site as President Kennedy had been a naval officer during World War II.[134][135] The autopsy was conducted by three physicians: naval commanders James Humes and J. Thornton Boswell, with assistance from ballistics wound expert Pierre A. Finck; Humes led the procedure.[136] Under pressure from the Kennedy family and White House staffers to expedite the procedure, the physicians conducted a "rushed" and incomplete autopsy.[137] Kennedy's personal physician, Rear Admiral George Burkley,[138] signed a death certificate on November 23 and recorded that the cause of death was a gunshot wound to the skull.[139][140]

Three years after the autopsy, Kennedy's brain—which had been removed and preserved for later analysis—was found to be missing when the Kennedy family transferred material to the National Archives.[141][142] Conspiracy theorists often claim that the brain may have shown that the headshot entered from the front. Alternatively, the HSCA concluded that an assistant to Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy, the president's brother, likely removed the footlocker holding the brain and other materials at his direction, and he "either destroyed these materials or otherwise rendered them inaccessible" to prevent "misuse" of said material[143] or to hide the extent of the president's chronic illnesses and consequent medication.[142] Some autopsy X-rays and photographs have also been lost.[144]

Most historians regard the autopsy as the "most botched" segment of the government's investigation.[133] The HSCA forensic pathology panel concluded that the autopsy had "extensive failings", including failure to take sufficient photographs, failure to determine the exact exit or entry point of the head bullet, not dissecting the back and neck, and neglecting to determine the angles of gunshot injuries relative to body axis.[145] The panel further concluded that the two doctors were not qualified to have conducted a forensic autopsy. Panel member Milton Helpern—Chief Medical Examiner for New York City—said that selecting Humes (who had only taken a single course on forensic pathology) to lead the autopsy was "like sending a seven-year-old boy who has taken three lessons on the violin over to the New York Philharmonic and expecting him to perform a Tchaikovsky symphony".[146]

Funeral

 
Kennedy's coffin is carried from the Capitol, November 25.

Following the autopsy, Kennedy lay in repose in the East Room of the White House for 24 hours.[147][148] President Johnson issued Presidential Proclamation 3561, declaring November 25 to be a national day of mourning,[149][150] and that only essential emergency workers be at their posts.[151] The coffin was then carried on a horse-drawn caisson to the Capitol to lie in state. Hundreds of thousands of mourners lined up to view the guarded casket,[152][153] with a quarter million passing through the rotunda during the 18 hours of lying in state.[152] Even in the Soviet Union—according to a memo by FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover—news of the assassination "was greeted by great shock and consternation and church bells were tolled in the memory of President Kennedy".[154][155]

Kennedy's funeral service was held on November 25, at St. Matthew's Cathedral,[156] with the Requiem Mass led by Cardinal Richard Cushing.[156] About 1,200 guests, including representatives from over 90 countries, attended.[157][158] Although there was no formal eulogy,[159][160] Auxiliary Bishop Philip M. Hannan read excerpts from Kennedy's speeches and writings.[158] After the service, Kennedy was buried at Arlington National Cemetery in Virginia.[161] An eternal flame was lit at his burial site in 1967.[162]

Killing of Oswald

 
Robert H. Jackson's photograph Jack Ruby Shoots Lee Harvey Oswald. Oswald was being escorted by police detective Jim Leavelle (tan suit) for the transfer from the city jail to the county jail. Ruby died in prison in 1967.

On Sunday, November 24, at 11:21 a.m., as Oswald was being escorted to a car in the basement of Dallas Police headquarters for the transfer from the city jail to the county jail, he was shot by Dallas nightclub owner Jack Ruby. The shooting was broadcast live on television.[42] Robert H. Jackson of the Dallas Times Herald photographed the shooting which was titled, Jack Ruby Shoots Lee Harvey Oswald for which he was awarded the 1964 Pulitzer Prize for Photography.[163]

Drifting in and out of consciousness, Oswald was taken by ambulance to Parkland Memorial Hospital; he was treated by the same surgeons who had tried to save Kennedy.[164] The bullet had entered his lower left chest but had not exited; major heart blood vessels such as the aorta and inferior vena cava were severed, and the spleen, kidney, and liver were hit.[165] Despite surgical intervention and defibrillation, Oswald died at 1:07 p.m.[166]

Arrested immediately after the shooting, Ruby testified to the Warren Commission that he had been distraught by Kennedy's death and that killing Oswald would spare "Mrs. Kennedy the discomfiture of coming back to trial". He also stated he shot Oswald on the spur of the moment when the opportunity presented itself, without considering any reason for doing so.[167] Initially, Ruby wished to defend himself[clarification needed] in his trial until his lawyer Melvin Belli dissuaded him: Belli argued that Ruby had an episode of psychomotor epilepsy and was thus not responsible.[168] Ruby was convicted, but the decision was overturned on appeal. While awaiting retrial in 1967,[169] Ruby died of a pulmonary embolism, secondary to cancer. Like Oswald and Kennedy, Ruby was declared dead at Parkland Hospital.[170]

Films and photographs of the assassination

My god, I saw the whole thing. I saw the man's brains come out of his head.

Abraham Zapruder[90]

 
The Bell & Howell Zoomatic movie camera used by Abraham Zapruder to capture footage of the motorcade and Kennedy's killing, which later came to be known as the Zapruder film. The camera is preserved within the collection of the National Archives.

Standing on the pergola wall some 65 feet (20 m) from the road,[171] tailor Abraham Zapruder recorded Kennedy's killing on 26 seconds of silent 8 mm film — known as the Zapruder film.[172] Frame 313 captures the exact moment at which Kennedy's head explodes.[173] Life magazine published frame enlargements from the Zapruder film shortly after the assassination.[172][174] The footage itself was first publicly shown at the 1969 trial of Clay Shaw, and on television in 1975 by Geraldo Rivera.[175] In 1999, an arbitration panel ordered the federal government to pay $615,384 per second of film to Zapruder's heirs, valuing the complete film at $16 million (equivalent to $26.6 million in 2022).[176][177]

Zapruder was one of at least 32 people in Dealey Plaza known to have made film or still photographs at or around the time of the shooting.[178] Most notably among the photographers, Mary Moorman took several photos of Kennedy with her Polaroid, including one of Kennedy less than one-sixth of a second after the headshot.[179]

As well as Zapruder, Charles Bronson, Marie Muchmore, and Orville Nix filmed the assassination, but at farther distances than Zapruder.[180][181] Of the three, only Nix — who filmed the assassination from the opposite side of Elm Street from Zapruder, capturing the grassy knoll — actually recorded the fatal shot.[181][182][note 12] In 1966, Nix claimed that, after he gave the film to the FBI, the duplicate that they returned had frames "missing" or "ruined". Although lower-quality duplicates exist, the original film has been missing since 1978.[182] Previously unknown footage filmed by George Jefferies was released in 2007.[183][184] Recorded a few blocks before the shooting, the film captures Kennedy's bunched suit jacket, explaining the discrepancies between the location of the bullet hole in Kennedy's back and his jacket.[185]

Some films and photographs captured an unidentified woman apparently filming the assassination; researchers have nicknamed her the Babushka Lady due to the shawl around her head.[186] In 1978, Gordon Arnold came forward and claimed that he had filmed the assassination from the grassy knoll and that a police officer had confiscated his film.[187] Arnold is not visible in any photographs taken of the area, which Vincent Bugliosi—author of Reclaiming History—called "conclusive photographic proof that Arnold's story was fabricated".[188]

Official investigations

Dallas Police

 
Lee Harvey Oswald in police custody.

At the Dallas Police headquarters, officers interrogated Oswald about the shootings of Kennedy and Tippit; these intermittent interviews lasted for approximately 12 hours between 2:30 p.m. on November 22 and 11 a.m. on November 24.[189] Throughout, Oswald denied any involvement and resorted to statements that were found to be false.[190]

Captain J. W. Fritz of the Homicide and Robbery Bureau did most of the questioning and kept only rudimentary notes.[191][192] Days later, Fritz wrote a report of the interrogation from notes he made afterwards.[191] There were no stenographic or tape recordings. Representatives of other law enforcement agencies were also present, including the FBI and the Secret Service, and occasionally participated in the questioning.[190] Several of the FBI agents who were present wrote contemporaneous reports of the interrogation.[193]

On the evening of November 22, Dallas Police performed paraffin tests on Oswald's hands and right cheek in an effort to establish whether or not he had recently fired a weapon. The results were positive for the hands and negative for the right cheek. Such tests were unreliable,[190][194] and the Warren Commission did not rely on these results.[190]

The Dallas police forced Oswald to host a press conference after midnight on November 23, and, early in the investigation, made many leaks to the media. Their conduct angered Johnson, who instructed the FBI to tell them to "stop talking about the assassination".[128] Dallas Police, after the FBI expressed concerns that someone might try to kill Oswald, assured federal authorities that they would provide him adequate protection.[195]

FBI investigation

 
FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover (pictured between Robert and John F. Kennedy in May 1963) wrote in a 1964 memo that "we left no stone unturned".[196]

The FBI immediately launched an investigation into the assassination, relying on a federal statute that forbade assaulting a federal officer. Within 24 hours of the killing, FBI Director Hoover sent President Johnson a preliminary report finding that Oswald was the sole culprit. After Ruby killed Oswald, Johnson decided that the Texan authorities were incompetent and instructed the FBI to conduct a complete investigation.[128]

On December 9, 1963, the Warren Commission received the FBI's report of its investigation which concluded that three bullets had been fired‍—‌the first striking Kennedy in the upper back; the second striking Connally; and the third striking Kennedy in the head, killing him.[197] The FBI continued to serve as the main investigative arm of the Warren Commission in the field. A total of 169 FBI agents worked on the case, conducting over 25,000 interviews and writing over 2,300 reports.[196]

The thoroughness of the FBI's investigation is contested. Bugliosi applauded its quality and cites conspiracy theorist Harrison Edward Livingstone's praise of the FBI's commitment to following all leads.[198] In its 1979 report, the HSCA found that the FBI's investigation of pro- and anti-Castro Cubans, and any connections to Oswald or Ruby, was insufficient.[196] The HSCA also noted that Hoover "seemed determined [to make the case that Oswald was the lone assassin] within 24 hours of the assassination".[199]

Warren Commission

 
The Warren Commission presents its report to President Johnson. From left to right: John McCloy, J. Lee Rankin (General Counsel), Senator Richard Russell, Congressman Gerald Ford, Chief Justice Earl Warren, President Lyndon B. Johnson, Allen Dulles, Senator John Sherman Cooper, and Congressman Hale Boggs.

On November 29, President Johnson established by executive order "The President's Commission on the Assassination of President Kennedy" and selected Chief Justice Earl Warren of the U.S. Supreme Court to chair the investigation, commonly known as the Warren Commission.[200][128] Its 888-page final report was presented to Johnson on September 24, 1964, and made public three days later.[201] It concluded that Lee Harvey Oswald had acted alone in killing Kennedy and wounding Connally, and that Jack Ruby acted alone in killing Oswald.[202][203] It made no conclusions as to Oswald's motive, but noted his Marxism, anti-authoritarianism, violent tendencies, failure to form personal relationships, and his desire to be significant in history.[204]

Upon examining the Zapruder film, commission staffers realized that the FBI's gunshot theory was impossible. The reaction times of Kennedy and Connally were too close to have been caused by two bullets from Oswald: the reaction interval was less than the 2.3 seconds that it took to reload.[205][206] This was one of the commission's most crucial findings: that a single shot caused the non-fatal wounds of Kennedy and Connally, known as the "single-bullet theory".[207][208] In May 1964, staffer Arlen Specter replicated the single bullet's trajectory via a reenactment in Dealey Plaza: the bullet's path was exactly consistent with Kennedy's and Connally's wounds.[209]

Out of the eight commission members, three—Representative Hale Boggs and Senators John Cooper and Richard Russell—found the theory "improbable"; their qualms were not mentioned in the final report.[210] Conspiracy theorists labelled this theory the "magic bullet theory", partly due to the bullet's intact and purportedly pristine state. However, the HSCA's Michael Baden noted that the bullet, despite its lack of fragmentation, was fundamentally deformed.[73] In 2023, Secret Service Agent Paul Landis—who had stood on the running board of Kennedy's car—told The New York Times that he retrieved the "magic bullet" from immediately behind Kennedy's seat upon arrival at Parkland, and that he placed it on Kennedy's stretcher. Landis believes that the bullet dislodged from a shallow wound in Kennedy's back.[211]

As well as the Warren Report's 27 published volumes, the commission created hundreds of thousands of pages of investigative reports and documents. Relman Morin stated that "Never in history was a crime probed as intensely"; Bugliosi concluded that the commission's basic findings have "held up remarkably well".[212] According to Gerald Posner, the Warren report is "universally derided" by the American public.[213] Walter Cronkite noted that, "Although the Warren Commission had full power to conduct its own independent investigation, it permitted the FBI and the CIA to investigate themselves – and so cast a permanent shadow on the answers."[214] According to a 2014 report by CIA Chief Historian David Robarge, then-CIA director John A. McCone was involved in a "benign cover-up" by withholding information from the commission.[215]

Trial of Clay Shaw

 
Clay Shaw (pictured in 1951) was acquitted by the New Orleans jury after less than an hour of deliberation.

On March 22, 1967, New Orleans District Attorney Jim Garrison arrested and charged New Orleans businessman Clay Shaw with conspiring to assassinate President Kennedy, with the help of Oswald, David Ferrie, and others.[216] A respected businessman who had helped renovate and preserve the French Quarter,[216] Shaw was described as "the unlikeliest villain since Oscar Wilde".[217] Both Shaw and the neurotic, avidly anti-Castro Ferrie were members of New Orleans' gay community.[218] Ferrie died, possibly by suicide, four days after news of the investigation broke.[219] On The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson in 1968, Garrison first publicly alleged that Shaw and Ferrie had been part of a larger CIA scheme to kill Kennedy and frame Oswald.[220] In the 34-day trial conducted in 1969,[221] Garrison played the Zapruder film and argued that the backwards motion of Kennedy's head after the fatal shot was indicative of a shooter in front on the grassy knoll.[222]

After a brief deliberation, the jury found Shaw not guilty.[221] Mark Lane interviewed the jurors after the trial and stated that some believed that Shaw likely was involved in a conspiracy but that there was insufficient evidence to convict.[223][224] Lane's claims have been disputed by playwright James Kirkwood—a personal friend of Clay Shaw—who said that he met several jurors who denied ever speaking to Lane.[225][226] Kirkwood also questioned Lane's claim that the jury believed that there was a conspiracy:[227] jury foreman Sidney Hebert told Kirkwood, "I didn't think too much of the Warren Report either until the trial. Now I think a lot more of it than I did before."[228]

According to academic E. Jerald Ogg, the Shaw trial is now widely regarded as a "travesty of justice";[229] Kirkwood likened the trial to a Spanish Inquisition hearing.[230] Other observers have characterized the proceedings as relying on homophobia.[231] It remains the only trial to be brought for the Kennedy assassination.[216] In 1979, former CIA director Richard Helms testified that Shaw had been a part-time contact of the Domestic Contact Service of the CIA, through which Shaw volunteered information from his travels abroad, mostly to Latin America. However, according to Max Holland, some 150,000 Americans were contacts.[232] In 1993, the PBS program Frontline obtained a group photograph that featured Ferrie and Oswald together at a 1955 cookout for the Civil Air Patrol: Ferrie had denied ever knowing Oswald.[233]

Ramsey Clark Panel

 
The panel organized by Attorney General Ramsey Clark (pictured with President Lyndon B. Johnson in 1968) found that two bullets struck Kennedy from behind.

Excluding Chief Justice Warren, the members of Warren Commission did not view the photographs or X-rays taken during Kennedy's autopsy. According to Warren, this was to avoid having to publicly release the explicit material to "sensation mongers".[234] Due to persistent speculation, in February 1968, Attorney General Ramsey Clark convened a panel of four medical experts to examine the photographs and X-rays from the Kennedy autopsy. Their findings concurred with the Warren Commission: Kennedy was struck by two bullets, both from behind.[235]

Rockefeller Commission

In 1975, President Gerald Ford—who had been a member of the Warren Commission a decade prior—established the United States President's Commission on CIA Activities within the United States, better known as the Rockefeller Commission after its chairman, Vice President Nelson Rockefeller.[236][237] The commission received a mandate to determine if any domestic activities by the CIA were unlawful and to make appropriate recommendations: accordingly, it also re-examined the Kennedy assassination.[235]

 
The Rockefeller Commission first proposed that the backwards motion of Kennedy following the fatal shot—which conspiracy theorists claim is indicative of a shot from the grassy knoll—was due to a "seizure-like neuromuscular reaction".

After five months of investigation, the Rockefeller Commission submitted its report to President Ford.[238] The report reviewed the medical evidence and agreed that Kennedy had been killed by two shots from behind.[235] Refuting Garrison's claims that the backwards motion of Kennedy's head seen on the Zapruder film was indicative of a grassy knoll shooter,[222] the commission found that "such a motion would be caused by a violent straightening and stiffening of the entire body as a result of a seizure-like neuromuscular reaction to major damage inflicted to nerve centers in the brain".[239] The later HSCA also suggested that the "propulsive effect resulting from brain matter" ejected from the exit wound may have been responsible.[240] Pathologist Vincent Di Maio testified before the HSCA that the notion of a "transfer of momentum" from a grassy knoll bullet was unfounded and something from "Arnold Schwarzenegger pictures".[239]

The Rockefeller Commission also sought to determine whether CIA operatives—particularly E. Howard Hunt and Frank Sturgis—were present in Dealey Plaza during the assassination, and whether these two men were among the "three tramps" pictured shortly after the assassination. The commission found no evidence for these claims.[237] It also inquired into purported connections between the CIA and Oswald and Ruby, for which it found no evidence and concluded was "farfetched speculation".[237] They concluded that there was "no credible evidence of CIA involvement".[235]

Church Committee

 
Church Committee report (Book II)

In 1975, following the Watergate scandal and the revelation of CIA misconduct by Seymour Hersh (the CIA's so-called "Family Jewels"), the U.S. Senate launched the United States Senate Select Committee to Study Governmental Operations with Respect to Intelligence Activities—better known as the Church Committee after its chairman, Senator Frank Church.[241][242][243] The committee was to investigate all improper and unlawful actions by the CIA and FBI, both foreign and domestic. Due to persisting theories, the Church Committee organized a subcommittee (staffed by Senators Richard Schweiker and Gary Hart) to examine CIA and FBI conduct pertaining to the assassination.[244]

In its final report, the Church Committee concluded that there was no evidence of a CIA- or FBI-led conspiracy.[244] They found that the original investigation into the assassination was "deficient" and criticized the FBI and CIA for withholding information from the Warren Commission. In particular, it noted that knowledge of the CIA's many failed attempts to assassinate Castro may have significantly affected the course of the investigation.[244][245] Moreover, the Church Committee revealed that the CIA had conspired with the Mafia in these plots against Castro.[244][246] These revelations led to further public scrutiny of the assassination.[245]

United States House Select Committee on Assassinations

 
The HSCA concurred with the Warren Commission's single-bullet theory. (The figure illustrates how the oblong wound in Connally's back was indicative of a bullet which had been tumbling after striking an intervening object.)
Of the nine-member medical panel, only Dr. Cyril Wecht (testimony above) rejected the theory.[247]

As a result of increasing public and congressional skepticism of the Warren Commission's findings and the transparency of government agencies,[245] in 1976 the House Select Committee on Assassinations was created to investigate the assassinations of Kennedy and that of Martin Luther King, Jr.[248]

The HSCA conducted its inquiry until 1978 and issued its final report the following year, concluding that Kennedy was likely assassinated as a result of a conspiracy.[249] They concluded that there was a "high probability" that a fourth shot was fired from the grassy knoll, but they stated that this shot missed Kennedy.[250] Concerning the conclusions of "probable conspiracy", four of the twelve committee members wrote dissenting opinions.[251]

The HSCA also concluded that previous investigations into Oswald's responsibility were "thorough and reliable" but did not adequately investigate the possibility of a conspiracy, and that federal agencies performed with "varying degrees of competency".[252] Specifically, the FBI and CIA were found to be deficient in sharing information with other agencies and the Warren Commission. Instead of furnishing all relevant information, the FBI and CIA only responded to specific requests and were still occasionally inadequate.[253] Furthermore, the Secret Service did not properly analyze information it possessed prior to the assassination and was inadequately prepared to protect Kennedy.[251]

The chief reason for the conclusion of "probable conspiracy" was, according to the report's dissent, the subsequently discredited acoustic analysis of a police channel Dictabelt recording.[250][254][255] In accordance with the recommendations of the HSCA, the Dictabelt recording and acoustic evidence of a second assassin was subsequently reexamined. In light of investigative reports from the FBI's Technical Services Division and a specially appointed National Academy of Sciences Committee determining that "reliable acoustic data do not support a conclusion that there was a second gunman",[254] the Justice Department concluded "that no persuasive evidence can be identified to support the theory of a conspiracy" in the Kennedy assassination.[255]

JFK Act and Assassination Records Review Board

 
Oliver Stone's 1991 film JFK spurred the "JFK Act", which mandated the release of all relevant classified files.

In 1991, Oliver Stone's film JFK renewed interest in the assassination and particularly in the still-classified files relating to the killing. In response, Congress passed the JFK Records Act, which called for the National Archives to collect and release all assassination-related documents within 25 years.[256][257][258] The act also mandated the creation of an independent office, the Assassination Records Review Board, to review the submitted records for completeness and continued secrecy. From 1994 until 1998, the Assassination Records Review Board gathered and unsealed about 60,000 documents comprising over 4 million pages.[259][260]

A 1998 staff report for the Assassinations Records Review Board contended that brain photographs in the Kennedy records may not be of Kennedy's brain, reportedly showing much less damage than Kennedy sustained. Dr. Boswell refuted these allegations.[261] The board also found that, conflicting with the photographic images showing no such defect, several witnesses (at both Parkland hospital and the autopsy) remembered a large wound in the back of Kennedy's head.[262] The board, and board member Jeremy Gunn, stressed the problems with witness testimony, urging people to weigh all of the evidence, with due concern for human error, rather than take single statements as "proof" for one theory or another.[263]

All remaining assassination-related records were scheduled to be released by October 2017, with the exception of documents certified for continued postponement by succeeding presidents due to "identifiable harm... to the military, defense, intelligence operations, law enforcement, or conduct of foreign relations... of such gravity that it outweighs the public interest in disclosure."[264][265] President Donald Trump said in October 2017 that he would not block the release of documents,[265] but in April 2018—the deadline he set to release all JFK records—Trump blocked the release of some records until October 2021.[266][257] President Joe Biden, citing the COVID-19 pandemic, delayed the release further,[267][268] before releasing 13,173 unredacted documents in 2022.[269] A second group of files were unsealed in June 2023, at which point 99 percent of documents had been made public.[269][270]

Conspiracy theories

 
The wooden fence on the grassy knoll, where many theories claim that a second gunman stood.
 
The "Badge Man" can purportedly be seen firing a weapon from the grassy knoll in this expansion of the Mary Moorman photograph.[179]

The Kennedy assassination has been described as "the mother of all conspiracies".[271] For decades, polls have consistently found that a majority of Americans believe there was a conspiracy;[272][273][274] some 1,000 to 2,000 books—mostly pro-conspiracy—have been written about the killing.[275] Across different theories, Oswald's role varies from co-conspirator to entirely innocent.[276][277] Common culprits include the FBI, the CIA, the U.S. military,[277] the Mafia,[278] the military-industrial complex,[278] Vice President Johnson, Castro, the KGB, or some combination thereof.[279] Bugliosi estimated that a total of 42 groups, 82 assassins, and 214 people had been accused in various assassination theories.[280]

Conspiracy theorists often argue that there were multiple shooters—a "triangulation of crossfire"—and that the fatal shot was fired from the grassy knoll and struck Kennedy in the front of the head.[281] Individuals present in Dealey Plaza have been the subject of much speculation, including the three tramps, the umbrella man, and the purported Badge Man.[282][283][284] Conspiracy theorists argue that the autopsy and official investigations were flawed or, at worst, complicit,[285] and that witnesses to the Kennedy assassination met mysterious and suspicious deaths.[286]

Conspiracy theories have been espoused by notable figures, such as L. Fletcher Prouty, Chief of Special Operations for the Joint Chiefs of Staff under Kennedy, who believed that elements of the U.S. military and intelligence communities had conspired to assassinate the president.[287] Governor Connally also rejected the single-bullet theory,[288][289] and President Johnson reportedly expressed doubt regarding the Warren Commission's conclusions prior to his death.[290] According to Robert F. Kennedy Jr., his father believed that the Warren Report was a "shoddy piece of craftsmanship" and that John F. Kennedy had been killed by a conspiracy, possibly involving Cuban exiles and the CIA.[291] Communist rulers like Castro and Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev believed that Kennedy had been killed by right-wing Americans.[292] Former CIA director R. James Woolsey has argued that Oswald killed Kennedy as part of a Soviet conspiracy.[293]

Legacy

Political impact and memorialization

 
Congress authorized the minting of a new 50-cent piece, the Kennedy half dollar, in December 1963.[294]

On November 27—five days after the assassination—President Johnson delivered his "Let Us Continue" speech to Congress.[295] Effectively an inaugural address,[296] Johnson called for the realization of Kennedy's policies, particularly on civil rights; this effort soon materialized as the Civil Rights Act of 1964.[297] Confusion surrounding Johnson's succession led to the Twenty-fifth Amendment to the U.S Constitution, which was adopted in 1967 and affirmed that the vice president became president upon the president's death.[298]

On November 29, President Johnson issued Executive Order 11129, renaming Florida's Cape Canaveral—a name borne since at least 1530—to Cape Kennedy.[299][note 13] NASA's Launch Operations Center, located on the cape, was also renamed as the Kennedy Space Center.[301] The federal government honored Kennedy in other ways, such as replacing the Benjamin Franklin half dollar with the Kennedy half dollar,[294] and renaming Washington, D.C.'s long-planned National Culture Center as the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts.[302] New York City's airport was also renamed as the John F. Kennedy International Airport.[303]

Kennedy's assassination also resulted in an overhaul of the Secret Service and its procedures. Open limousines were eliminated, staffing was significantly increased, and specialized teams like counter-sniper units were established. The agency's budget has also increased, from $5.5 million in 1963 (equivalent to $42 million in 2013) to over $1.6 billion by the 50th anniversary in 2013.[304]

Cultural impact and depictions

  • They say they can't believe it; It's a sacrilegious shame.
  • Now, who would want to hurt such a hero of the game?
  • But you know I predicted it; I knew he had to fall.
  • How did it happen? Hope his suffering was small.
  • Tell me every detail, for I've got to know it all,
  • And do you have a picture of the pain?

Phil Ochs' song "Crucifixion" (1966)[305]

John F. Kennedy's assassination was the first of four major assassinations during the 1960s, coming two years before the assassination of Malcolm X in 1965, and five years before the assassinations of Martin Luther King Jr. and Robert F. Kennedy in 1968.[306] For the public, Kennedy's assassination mythologized him into a heroic figure.[307] Although scholars typically regard Kennedy as a good but not great president,[308] public opinion polls consistently find him the most popular post-WWII president.[308][309]

Kennedy's murder left a lasting impression on many. As with the attack on Pearl Harbor of December 7, 1941, and, much later, the September 11 attacks in 2001, asking "Where were you when you heard about President Kennedy's assassination?" became a common topic of discussion.[310][311] Journalist Dan Rather opined that the Kennedy assassination will be discussed "a hundred years from now, a thousand years from now, in somewhat the same way as people discuss the Iliad. Different people read Homer's description of the war and come to different conclusions, and so it shall be for Kennedy's death."[312]

Along with Oliver Stone's JFK, the assassination has been portrayed in several films: the pro-conspiracy, Dalton Trumbo-written Executive Action (1973) was the first feature film to depict the assassination.[313] Besides explicit portrayals, some critics have argued that the Zapruder film—which itself has been featured in many films and television episodes—advanced cinéma vérité or inspired more graphic depictions of violence in American cinema.[173][314][315][316] Many works of literature have also explored the killing, such as Don DeLillo's 1988 novel Libra in which Oswald is a CIA agent,[317] James Ellroy's 1995 work American Tabloid,[318] and Stephen King's 2011 time travel novel 11/22/63.[319] The assassination has also been featured in several musical compositions, such as Igor Stravinsky's 1964 piece Elegy for J.F.K. and Phil Ochs' 1966 song "Crucifixion",[320][321] which reportedly brought Robert Kennedy to tears.[321][322] Other songs include "Abraham, Martin and John" (1968) and Bob Dylan's "Murder Most Foul" (2020).[323][324]

Artifacts, museums, and locations today

 
An "X" in the Dealey Plaza roadway marks where the fatal bullet struck Kennedy.[325]

In 1993, the National Park Service designated Dealey Plaza, the surrounding buildings, the overpass, and a portion of the adjacent railyard as a National Historic Landmark District.[325] The Depository and its Sixth Floor Museum, operated by the city of Dallas, draw over 325,000 visitors annually.[326]

The Boeing 707 that served as Air Force One at the time of the assassination is on display at the National Museum of the United States Air Force; Kennedy's limousine is at the Henry Ford Museum.[327] The Lincoln Catafalque, on which Kennedy's coffin rested in the Capitol, is exhibited at the Capitol Visitor Center.[328] Jacqueline's pink suit, autopsy X-rays, and President Kennedy's blood-stained clothing are in the National Archives, with access controlled by the Kennedy family. Other items in the Archives include Parkland Hospital trauma room equipment; Oswald's rifle, diary, and revolver; bullet fragments; and the limousine's windshield.[327] The Texas State Archives preserve Connally's bullet-punctured clothes; the gun Ruby used to kill Oswald came into the possession of Ruby's brother Earl, and was sold in 1991 for $220,000 (equivalent to $423,000 in 2022).[329]

At the direction of Robert F. Kennedy, some items were destroyed. The casket in which Kennedy's body was transported from Dallas to Washington was dropped into the sea, because "its public display would be extremely offensive and contrary to public policy".[330]

Notes and references

Notes

  1. ^ This photo and a similar one are known as the "backyard photographs"; according to Bugliosi, it is one of the pieces of evidence most damning for Oswald. Oswald told Dallas police that the photographs were not genuine and that someone must have superimposed his head.[15] Marina Oswald testified that she took the pictures.[16]
  2. ^ In 1964, KGB Agent Yuri Nosenko defected to the United States. He divulged that Soviet intelligence surveilled Oswald, regarded him as mentally unstable, and had no association with him.[24] Although the FBI trusted Nosenko, the CIA believed that he was a mole and convinced the Warren Commission not to interview him.[25]
  3. ^ At Oswald's request, he met with FBI Special Agent John Quigley while in custody. Posner cites this as proof that Oswald was not a government agent, questioning why he might "blow his cover".[39]
  4. ^ Jack Dougherty, the only witness who saw Oswald enter the Depository on the morning of the assassination, testified to the Warren Commission that he did not remember seeing Oswald with any package.[44] Bugliosi questioned his reliability as a witness: Dougherty's father told FBI agents on November 23 that his son "had considerable difficulty in coordinating his mental facilities with his speech".[45]
  5. ^ After the first shot, witness Virgie Rachley—an employee at the Texas School Book Depository—reported seeing sparks on the pavement shortly behind the president's limousine.[62]
  6. ^ Student Billy Harper later found a fragment of Kennedy's skull on the road.[80]
  7. ^ The journalists pictured with them arrived as the end of the motorcade passed through Dealey Plaza.[89]
  8. ^ Bugliosi notes that Lee Bowers Jr. did not mention the "commotion" in an earlier affidavit, in which Bowers did take time to list all other suspicious happenings like circling vehicles with "Goldwater for '64" stickers. Moreover, conspiracy theorist Jim Moore questions whether Bowers could even have seen the area. Bowers testified that he "threw [the] red-on-red [signal]" just after the fatal shot, but the grassy knoll was partially obstructed from Bowers' position at the work panel.[95]
  9. ^ Three spent cartridges were found on the floor. One live round was found in the rifle. Dallas policemen thoroughly photographed the rifle before its removal.[104]
  10. ^ Lieutenant Day of the Dallas police examined the weapon prior to its seizure by the FBI. He found and photographed fingerprints on the trigger housing. Although Day believed the prints to be those of Oswald's right middle and ring fingers, the ridges were not clear enough to make a positive identification. Day then discovered a palm-print on the barrel underneath the wooden stock. He tentatively identified it as Oswald's, but was not able to photograph or analyze it in more depth as the FBI took the Carcano.[108] In D.C., FBI fingerprint expert Sebastian Latona found the photographs and extant prints to be "insufficient" as to make any conclusion. The rifle was returned to the Dallas police on November 24.[107] Five days later, the FBI made a positive identification using a card from Day.[109]
  11. ^ At the time of Kennedy's assassination, most of his cabinet was on a trip to Japan.[126]
  12. ^ Nix himself believed that the shots had come from the grassy knoll.[182]
  13. ^ In 1973, due to Floridians' discontent with the change, Florida Governor Reubin Askew mandated that Cape Kennedy be referred to as Cape Canaveral on all state documents and maps. The U.S. Board of Geographic Names accepted the name change later that year.[300]

Citations

  1. ^ "John F. Kennedy". The White House.
  2. ^ "John F. Kennedy: A Featured Biography". United States Senate.
  3. ^ a b Bugliosi (1998), p. xi.
  4. ^ "1960 Electoral College Results". National Archives.
  5. ^ "1960 The Cold War". John F. Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum.
  6. ^ Sabato (2013), pp. 422–423.
  7. ^ Hinckle & Turner (1981), pp. ix, 15, 18.
  8. ^ Jones (2008), pp. 41, 50, 94.
  9. ^ Borger (2022)
  10. ^ Bugliosi (2007), pp. 13–16.
  11. ^ Bugliosi (2008), pp. 17–23.
  12. ^ Warren (1964), p. 28.
  13. ^ a b c d e Warren (1964), p. 40.
  14. ^ White (1965), p. 3.
  15. ^ Bugliosi (2007), p. 792.
  16. ^ Bugliosi (2007), p. 793.
  17. ^ Pontchartrain (2019)
  18. ^ Warren (1964), p. 683.
  19. ^ a b Posner (1993), p. 28.
  20. ^ Posner (1993), pp. 17–19.
  21. ^ Posner (1993), pp. 32–33.
  22. ^ Posner (1993), pp. 32–33, 46.
  23. ^ Posner (1993), pp. 46–53.
  24. ^ Posner (1993), pp. 34–36.
  25. ^ Posner (1993), pp. 38–39.
  26. ^ Warren (1964), p. 697.
  27. ^ Posner (1993), p. 53.
  28. ^ McMillan (1977), pp. 64–65.
  29. ^ a b Warren (1964), p. 712.
  30. ^ Warren (1964), p. 714.
  31. ^ Posner (1993), pp. 82–83, 85, 100.
  32. ^ Summers (2013), pp. 152–160.
  33. ^ Warren (1964), p. 183.
  34. ^ Warren (1964), p. 403.
  35. ^ Posner (1993), pp. 125–127.
  36. ^ Warren (1964), pp. 728–729.
  37. ^ Summers (2013), p. 211.
  38. ^ Posner (1993), pp. 151–152.
  39. ^ Posner (1993), pp. 153–155.
  40. ^ Posner (1993), pp. 172–190.
  41. ^ Warren (1964), pp. 14–15.
  42. ^ a b Bagdikian (1963), p. 26.
  43. ^ Bugliosi (2007), pp. 6, 165.
  44. ^ Bugliosi (2007), p. 819.
  45. ^ Bugliosi (2007), p. 820.
  46. ^ Warren (1964), pp. 130–135.
  47. ^ Bugliosi (2007), pp. 23–24.
  48. ^ a b Testimony of Kenneth P. O'Donnell, Warren Commission Hearings.
  49. ^ Blaine (2011), p. 196.
  50. ^ Bugliosi (2008), pp. 25, 41.
  51. ^ Bugliosi (2007), pp. 29.
  52. ^ Bugliosi (2008), p. 30.
  53. ^ Bugliosi (2007), pp. 19–20, 30–38, 49.
  54. ^ "November 22, 1963: Death of the President". John F. Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum.
  55. ^ Bugliosi (2008), p. 51.
  56. ^ Bugliosi (2008), pp. 56–57.
  57. ^ Bugliosi (2008), pp. 56, 58.
  58. ^ McAdams (2012)
  59. ^ Warren (1964), p. 110.
  60. ^ Warren (1964), p. 49.
  61. ^ Bugliosi (2008), pp. 58–60.
  62. ^ a b Bugliosi (2007), p. 39.
  63. ^ Bugliosi (2007), pp. xxix, 458.
  64. ^ HSCA Appendix to Hearings, Vol VI. p. 29.
  65. ^ a b c d Testimony of Gov. John Bowden Connally, Jr, Warren Commission Hearings.
  66. ^ Bugliosi (2008), p. 61.
  67. ^ Bugliosi (2008), p. 62.
  68. ^ Warren (1964), pp. 18–19.
  69. ^ Stokes (1979), pp. 41–46.
  70. ^ Testimony of Dr. Robert Roeder Shaw, Warren Commission Hearings.
  71. ^ Bugliosi (2008), pp. 61–62.
  72. ^ a b Sabato (2013), p. 216.
  73. ^ a b Posner (1993), pp. 335–336.
  74. ^ Warren (1964), pp. 85–96.
  75. ^ a b Testimony of Clyde A. Haygood, Warren Commission Hearings.
  76. ^ Bugliosi (2008), pp. 63–64.
  77. ^ Warren (1964), pp. 111–115.
  78. ^ Bugliosi (2007), pp. xx, 501.
  79. ^ Testimony of Bobby W. Hargis, Warren Commission Hearings.
  80. ^ Summers (2013), p. 45.
  81. ^ Bugliosi (2007), p. 29.
  82. ^ a b Testimony of Clinton J. Hill, Special Agent, Secret Service, Warren Commission Hearings.
  83. ^ Testimony of Mrs. John F. Kennedy, Warren Commission Hearings.
  84. ^ Testimony of Mrs. John Bowden Connally, Jr, Warren Commission Hearings.
  85. ^ Bugliosi (2007), p. 42.
  86. ^ Sabato (2013), p. 221.
  87. ^ Holland (2014)
  88. ^ Testimony of James Thomas Tague, Warren Commission Hearings.
  89. ^ Trask (1994), pp. 38–40.
  90. ^ a b Trask (1994), p. 76.
  91. ^ Summers (2013), pp. 56–57.
  92. ^ a b c Bugliosi (2007), p. 852.
  93. ^ Summers (2013), p. 35.
  94. ^ Bugliosi (2007), p. 898.
  95. ^ Bugliosi (2007), pp. 898–899.
  96. ^ Bugliosi (2008), p. 80.
  97. ^ Bugliosi (2008), p. 81.
  98. ^ Testimony of Howard Brennan, Warren Commission Hearings.
  99. ^ Bugliosi (2008), p. 64.
  100. ^ Summers (2013), p. 62.
  101. ^ Bugliosi (2008), p. 60.
  102. ^ Bugliosi (2007), p. 40.
  103. ^ Warren (1964), p. 645.
  104. ^ Bugliosi (2007), pp. 86–87.
  105. ^ Warren (1964), p. 118.
  106. ^ Warren (1964), p. 122.
  107. ^ a b Bugliosi (2007), p. 801.
  108. ^ Bugliosi (2007), p. 800.
  109. ^ Bugliosi (2007), pp. 801−802.
  110. ^ Warren (1964), p. 124.
  111. ^ Warren (1964), p. 79.
  112. ^ Bugliosi (2008), pp. 110−111, 151.
  113. ^ Bugliosi (2008), pp. 122–124, 127.
  114. ^ Bugliosi (2008), pp. 93–94.
  115. ^ Bugliosi (2007), pp. 94–95, 101.
  116. ^ Bugliosi (2008), pp. 150–152.
  117. ^ Bugliosi (2008), p. 153.
  118. ^ Bugliosi (2007), p. 161.
  119. ^ Bugliosi (2008), p. 85.
  120. ^ "Biographical sketch of Dr. George Gregory Burkley". Arlington National Cemetery.
  121. ^ a b Huber (2007), pp. 380–393.
  122. ^ Bugliosi (2008), p. 93.
  123. ^ "Walter Cronkite On The Assassination Of John F. Kennedy". NPR.
  124. ^ Daniel (2007), pp. 87, 88.
  125. ^ a b Boyd (2015), pp. 59, 62.
  126. ^ Ball (1982), p. 107.
  127. ^ a b c Jones (2013)
  128. ^ a b c d Kurtz (1982), p. 2.
  129. ^ a b Munson (2012)
  130. ^ a b Stafford (2012)
  131. ^ Bugliosi (2007), p. 110.
  132. ^ "President Lyndon B. Johnson takes Oath of Office, 22 November 1963". John F. Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum.
  133. ^ a b Bugliosi (2007), p. 382.
  134. ^ Associated Press (1963), pp. 29–31.
  135. ^ Sabato (2013), p. 22.
  136. ^ Bugliosi (2007), pp. 139–140.
  137. ^ Sabato (2013), p. 213.
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Works cited

Books

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Journal articles

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External links

  • (archived May 26, 2008)
  • The President John F. Kennedy Assassination Records Collection – National Archives and Records Administration
  • JFK Assassination:A look back at the death of President John F. Kennedy 50 years ago – CBS News
  • "November 22, 1963: Death of the President". John F. Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum.
  • "Weisberg Collection on the JFK Assassination" – Internet Archive
  • LIFE Magazine Nov. 25, 1966
  • John F. Kennedy Assassination Collection finding aid at University of Texas at Arlington Libraries Special Collections via Texas Archival Resources Online (TARO)

assassination, john, kennedy, kennedy, assassination, redirects, here, assassination, john, brother, robert, assassination, robert, kennedy, november, 1963, redirects, here, date, november, 1963, friday, november, 1963, john, kennedy, 35th, president, united, . Kennedy assassination redirects here For the assassination of John s brother Robert see Assassination of Robert F Kennedy November 22 1963 redirects here For the date see November 22 1963 Friday On November 22 1963 John F Kennedy the 35th president of the United States was assassinated while riding in a presidential motorcade through Dealey Plaza in Dallas Texas Kennedy was in the vehicle with his wife Jacqueline Texas Governor John Connally and Connally s wife Nellie when he was fatally shot from the nearby Texas School Book Depository by former U S Marine Lee Harvey Oswald The motorcade rushed to Parkland Memorial Hospital where Kennedy was pronounced dead about 30 minutes after the shooting Connally was also wounded in the attack but recovered Vice President Lyndon B Johnson was hastily sworn in as president two hours and eight minutes later aboard Air Force One at Dallas Love Field Assassination of John F KennedyPresident John F Kennedy his wife Jacqueline Texas governor John Connally and Connally s wife Nellie in the presidential limousine minutes before the assassination in DallasLocationDealey Plaza in Dallas Texas U S DateNovember 22 1963 60 years ago 1963 11 22 12 30 p m CST TargetJohn F KennedyWeapons6 5 52mm Italian Carcano M91 38 rifle Kennedy 38 cal Smith amp Wesson revolver Tippit DeathsJohn F KennedyJ D TippitInjuredJohn ConnallyJames TaguePerpetratorLee Harvey OswaldChargesMurder with malice 2 counts murdered before trial After the assassination Oswald returned home to retrieve a pistol he shot and killed lone Dallas policeman J D Tippit shortly afterwards Around 70 minutes after Kennedy and Connally were shot Oswald was apprehended by the Dallas Police Department and charged under Texas state law with the murders of Kennedy and Tippit At 11 21 a m on November 24 1963 as live television cameras covered Oswald s being moved through the basement of Dallas Police Headquarters he was fatally shot by Dallas nightclub operator Jack Ruby Like Kennedy Oswald was taken to Parkland Memorial Hospital where he soon died Ruby was convicted of Oswald s murder though the decision was overturned on appeal and Ruby died in prison in 1967 while awaiting a new trial After a 10 month investigation the Warren Commission concluded that Oswald assassinated Kennedy and that there was no evidence that either Oswald or Ruby was part of a conspiracy In 1967 New Orleans District Attorney Jim Garrison brought the only trial for Kennedy s murder against businessman Clay Shaw Shaw was acquitted Subsequent federal investigations such as the Rockefeller Commission and Church Committee agreed with the Warren Commission s general findings In its 1979 report the United States House Select Committee on Assassinations HSCA concluded that Kennedy was likely assassinated as a result of a conspiracy The HSCA did not identify possible conspirators but concluded that there was a high probability that two gunmen fired at the President The HSCA s conclusions were largely based on a police Dictabelt recording later debunked by the U S Justice Department Kennedy s assassination is still the subject of widespread debate and has spawned many conspiracy theories and alternative scenarios polls found that a majority of Americans believed there was a conspiracy The assassination left a profound impact and was the first of four major assassinations during the 1960s in the United States coming two years before the assassination of Malcolm X in 1965 and five years before the assassinations of Martin Luther King Jr and Kennedy s brother Robert in 1968 Kennedy was the fourth U S president to be assassinated and is the most recent to have died in office Contents 1 Background 1 1 Kennedy 1 2 Oswald 2 November 22 2 1 Kennedy s arrival in Dallas and route to Dealey Plaza 2 2 Shooting 2 3 Aftermath in Dealey Plaza 2 4 Oswald s flight killing of J D Tippit and arrest 2 5 Kennedy declared dead Johnson sworn in 3 Immediate aftermath 3 1 Autopsy 3 2 Funeral 3 3 Killing of Oswald 4 Films and photographs of the assassination 5 Official investigations 5 1 Dallas Police 5 2 FBI investigation 5 3 Warren Commission 5 4 Trial of Clay Shaw 5 5 Ramsey Clark Panel 5 6 Rockefeller Commission 5 7 Church Committee 5 8 United States House Select Committee on Assassinations 5 9 JFK Act and Assassination Records Review Board 6 Conspiracy theories 7 Legacy 7 1 Political impact and memorialization 7 2 Cultural impact and depictions 7 3 Artifacts museums and locations today 8 Notes and references 8 1 Notes 8 2 Citations 8 3 Works cited 8 3 1 Books 8 3 2 Government and institutional documents and reports 8 3 3 Warren Commission documents exhibits and testimonies 8 3 4 Journal articles 8 3 5 Magazines 8 3 6 News publications and websites 9 External linksBackgroundKennedy Main article John F Kennedy Further information Presidency of John F Kennedy nbsp Kennedy delivering his We choose to go to the Moon speech at Rice University 1962In 1960 John F Kennedy then a U S senator from Massachusetts was elected the 35th president of the United States with Lyndon B Johnson as his vice presidential running mate 1 2 3 4 Kennedy s tenure saw the height of the Cold War and much of his foreign policy was dedicated to countering the Soviet Union and communism 5 6 As president he authorized operations to overthrow Fidel Castro s communist government in Cuba 7 which culminated in the failed Bay of Pigs Invasion in 1961 during which he declined to directly involve American troops 8 The following year Kennedy deescalated the Cuban Missile Crisis an incident widely regarded as the closest that humanity has come to nuclear holocaust 9 In 1963 Kennedy decided to travel to Texas to smooth over frictions in the state s Democratic Party between liberal U S Senator Ralph Yarborough and conservative Governor John Connally 10 11 The visit was first agreed upon by Kennedy Johnson and Connally during a meeting in El Paso in June 12 The motorcade route was finalized on November 18 and announced soon thereafter 13 Kennedy also viewed the Texas trip as an informal launch of his 1964 reelection campaign 14 Oswald Main article Lee Harvey Oswald nbsp Lee Harvey Oswald center and others distributing pro Castro leaflets in New Orleans August 16 1963 nbsp A photograph of Oswald posing with his rifle holstered pistol and communist literature note 1 Lee Harvey Oswald born 1939 17 was a former U S Marine who had served in Japan and the Philippines and had espoused communism since reading Karl Marx at the age of 14 18 19 20 After accidentally shooting his elbow with an unauthorized handgun and fighting an officer Oswald was court martialed twice and demoted 19 In September 1959 he received a dependency discharge after claiming his mother was disabled 21 A 19 year old Oswald sailed on a freighter from New Orleans to France and then traveled to Finland where he was issued a Soviet visa 22 Oswald defected to the Soviet Union 23 note 2 and in January 1960 he was sent to work at a factory in Minsk Belarus 26 27 In 1961 he met and married Marina Prusakova 28 with whom he had a child 29 In 1962 he returned to the United States with a repatriation loan from the U S Embassy 29 He settled in the Dallas Fort Worth area 30 where he socialized with Russian emigres notably George de Mohrenschildt 31 32 In March 1963 a bullet narrowly missed General Edwin Walker at his Dallas residence a witness observed two conspicuous men Relying on Marina s testimony a note left by Oswald and ballistic evidence the Warren Commission attributed this assassination attempt to Oswald 33 In April 1963 Oswald returned to his birthplace New Orleans 34 and established an independent chapter of the pro Castro Fair Play for Cuba Committee of which he was the sole member 35 36 While passing out pro Castro literature alongside unknown compatriots Oswald was arrested after scuffling with anti Castro Cuban exiles 37 38 note 3 In late September 1963 Oswald traveled to Mexico City where according to the Warren Commission he visited the Soviet and Cuban embassies 40 On October 3 Oswald returned to Dallas and found work at the Texas School Book Depository on Dealey Plaza 41 During the workweek he lived separately from Marina at a Dallas rooming house 42 On the morning of the assassination he carried a long package which he told coworkers contained curtain rods into the Depository 43 note 4 the Warren Commission concluded that this package contained Oswald s disassembled rifle 46 November 22See also Timeline of the John F Kennedy assassination Kennedy s arrival in Dallas and route to Dealey Plaza nbsp President Kennedy and First Lady Jacqueline Kennedy arriving at Dallas Love Field on November 22 1963 nbsp The route of Kennedy s motorcade through Dealey Plaza The shooting occurred on Elm Street On November 22 Air Force One arrived at Dallas Love Field at 11 40 a m 47 President Kennedy and the First Lady boarded a 1961 Lincoln Continental convertible limousine to travel to a luncheon at the Dallas Trade Mart 48 13 Other occupants of this vehicle the second in the motorcade were Secret Service Agent Bill Greer who drove Special Agent Roy Kellerman in the front passenger seat and Governor Connally and his wife Nellie who sat just forward of the Kennedys 49 50 Four Dallas police motorcycle officers accompanied the Kennedy limousine 51 Vice President Johnson his wife Lady Bird and Senator Yarborough rode in another convertible 52 The motorcade s meandering 10 mile route through Dallas was designed to give Kennedy maximum exposure to crowds by passing through a suburban section of Dallas 48 13 and Main Street in Downtown Dallas before turning right on Houston Street After another block the motorcade was to turn left onto Elm Street pass through Dealey Plaza and travel a short segment of the Stemmons Freeway to the Trade Mart 13 The planned route had been reported in newspapers several days in advance 13 Despite concerns about hostile protestors Kennedy s UN Ambassador Adlai Stevenson had been spat on in Dallas a month earlier Kennedy was greeted warmly by enthusiastic crowds 53 54 55 Shooting nbsp Dealey Plaza in 2006 with Elm Street on the right and the Triple Underpass in the middle The white concrete pergola from which Zapruder was filming is at the center behind the lamp post and the Grassy Knoll is slightly to its left The red building partially visible at the extreme upper right is the Texas School Book Depository Kennedy s motorcade moved from right to left and Kennedy was struck by the final bullet just left of the lamp post in front of the pergola nbsp nbsp Robert Croft s photograph of Kennedy in Dealey Plaza before the first shot struck Kennedy left and the Mary Moorman photograph right taken a fraction of a second after the fatal shot Kennedy s limousine entered Dealey Plaza at 12 30 p m CST 3 Nellie Connally turned and commented to Kennedy who was sitting behind her Mr President they can t make you believe now that there are not some in Dallas who love and appreciate you can they Kennedy s reply No they sure can t were his last words 56 From Houston Street the limousine made the planned left turn onto Elm passing the Texas School Book Depository 57 As it continued down Elm Street multiple shots were fired about 80 of the witnesses recalled hearing three shots 58 The Warren Commission concluded that three shots were fired and noted that most witnesses recalled that the second and third shots were bunched together 59 Shortly after Kennedy began waving some witnesses heard the first gunshot but few in the crowd or motorcade reacted many interpreting the sound as a firecracker or backfire 60 61 note 5 nbsp nbsp Per the Warren Commission s single bullet theory top one bullet caused Kennedy s nonfatal wound and Connally s wounds Conspiracy theorists neglecting that Kennedy was not directly behind Connally claim that the trajectory required a magic bullet bottom 63 Within one second of each other Governor Connally and Mrs Kennedy turned abruptly from their left to their right 64 Connally an experienced hunter immediately recognized the sound as that of a rifle and turned his head and torso rightward noting nothing unusual behind him 62 He testified that he could not see Kennedy so he started to turn forward again turning from his right to his left and that when his head was facing about 20 degrees left of center 65 he was struck in his upper right back by a shot he did not hear 65 66 then shouted My God They re going to kill us all 67 According to the Warren Commission and the HSCA Kennedy was waving to the crowds on his right when a shot entered his upper back and exited his throat just beneath his larynx 68 69 He raised his elbows and clenched his fists in front of his face and neck then leaned forward and leftward Mrs Kennedy facing him put her arms around him 65 70 71 Although a serious wound it likely would have been survivable 72 According to the Warren Commission s single bullet theory derided as the magic bullet theory by conspiracy theorists Governor Connally was injured by the same bullet that exited Kennedy s neck The bullet created an oval shaped entry wound near his right shoulder struck and destroyed several inches of Connally s right fifth rib and exited his chest just below his right nipple puncturing and collapsing his lung That same bullet then entered his arm just above his right wrist and shattered his right radius bone The bullet exited just below the wrist at the inner side of his right palm and finally lodged in his left thigh 73 74 72 nbsp nbsp The trajectories of the two bullets that struck Kennedy per the House Select Committee on Assassinations As the limousine passed the grassy knoll 75 Kennedy was struck a second time by a fatal shot to the head 76 The Warren Commission made no finding as to whether this was the second or third bullet fired and concluded as did the HSCA that the second shot to strike Kennedy entered the rear of his head It then passed in fragments through his skull creating a large roughly ovular sic hole on the rear right side of the head and spraying blood and fragments His brain and blood spatter landed as far as the following Secret Service car and the motorcycle officers 77 78 79 note 6 Secret Service Agent Clint Hill was riding on the running board of the car immediately behind Kennedy s limousine 81 Hill testified to the Warren Commission that he heard one shot jumped onto the street and ran forward to board the limousine and protect Kennedy Hill stated that he heard the fatal headshot as he reached the Lincoln approximately five seconds after the first shot that he heard 82 After the headshot Mrs Kennedy began climbing onto the limousine s trunk but she later had no recollection of doing so 83 Hill believed she may have been reaching for a piece of Kennedy s skull 82 He jumped onto the limousine s bumper and he clung to the car as it exited Dealey Plaza and sped to Parkland Memorial Hospital After Mrs Kennedy crawled back into her seat both Governor and Mrs Connally heard her repeatedly saying They have killed my husband I have his brains in my hand 65 84 85 Bystander James Tague received a minor wound to the cheek either from bullet or concrete curb fragments while standing by the triple underpass 86 Nine months later the FBI removed the curb and spectrographic analysis revealed metallic residue consistent with the lead core in Oswald s ammunition 87 Tague testified before the Warren Commission and initially stated that he was wounded by either the second or third shot of the three shots that he remembered hearing When the commission counsel pressed him to be more specific Tague testified that he was wounded by the second shot 88 Aftermath in Dealey Plaza nbsp Bill and Gayle Newman shielding their children after hearing shots and dropping to the grass The grassy knoll and its picket fence are visible in the background note 7 As the motorcade left Dealey Plaza some witnesses sought cover 90 and others joined police officers to run up the grassy knoll in search of a shooter 75 91 No shooter was found behind the knoll s picket fence 92 Among the 178 witnesses who testified to the Warren Commission 78 were unsure of the shots origin 49 believed they came from the Depository and 21 thought they came from the grassy knoll 93 No witness ever reported seeing anyone with or without a gun except policemen immediately behind the knoll s picket fence at the time of the shooting 92 Lee Bowers was in a two story railroad switch tower 120 yards 110 m behind the grassy knoll s picket fence he was watching the motorcade and had an unobstructed view of the only route by which any shooter could flee the grassy knoll he saw no one leaving the scene 92 Bowers testified to the Warren Commission that one or two men were between him and the fence during the assassination one was a familiar parking lot attendant and the other wore a uniform like a county courthouse custodian He testified seeing some commotion on the grassy knoll at the time of the assassination something out of the ordinary a sort of milling around but something occurred in this particular spot which was out of the ordinary which attracted my eye for some reason which I could not identify 94 note 8 At 12 36 p m teenager Amos Euins approached Dallas police Sergeant D V Harkness to report having seen a colored man leaning out of the window with a rifle on the sixth floor of the Depository during the assassination in response Harkness radioed that he was sealing off the Depository 96 Witness Howard Brennan then approached a police inspector to report seeing a shooter a white man in khaki clothing in the same window 97 98 Police broadcast Brennan s description of the man at 12 45 p m 99 Brennan testified that after the second shot This man was aiming for his last shot and maybe paused for another second as though to assure himself that he had hit his mark 100 Witness James R Worrell Jr also reported seeing a gun barrel emerge from a sixth floor Depository window 101 Bonnie Ray Williams who was on the fifth floor of the Depository stated that the rifle s report was so loud and near that ceiling plaster fell onto his head 102 Oswald s flight killing of J D Tippit and arrest Further information John F Kennedy assassination rifle nbsp nbsp The view of the Texas School Book Depository from witness Howard Brennan circle A indicates where he saw Oswald firing a rifle At right the view from the sniper s nest in the Texas School Book Depository When searching the sixth floor of the Depository two deputies found an Italian Carcano M91 38 bolt action rifle 103 note 9 Oswald had purchased the used rifle the previous March under the alias A Hidell and had it delivered to his Dallas P O box 105 The FBI found Oswald s partial palm print on the barrel 106 107 note 10 and fibers on the rifle were consistent with those of Oswald s shirt 110 A bullet found on Governor Connally s hospital gurney and two fragments found in the limousine were ballistically matched to the Carcano 111 Oswald left the Depository and traveled by bus to his boarding house where he retrieved a jacket and revolver 112 At 1 12 p m police officer J D Tippit spotted Oswald walking in the residential neighborhood of Oak Cliff and called him to his patrol car After an exchange of words Tippit exited his vehicle Oswald then shot Tippit three times in the chest As Tippit lay on the ground Oswald fired a final shot into Tippit s right temple Oswald then calmly walked away before running as witnesses emerged 113 Oswald speaking in custody nbsp Oswald professing innocence nbsp Oswald s press conference As Dallas police officers conducted a roll call of Depository employees Oswald s supervisor Roy Truly realized that Oswald was absent and notified the police 114 Based on a false identification of Oswald Dallas police raided a library in Oak Cliff before realizing their mistake 115 At 1 36 p m the police were called after a conspicuous Oswald tired from running was seen sneaking into the Texas Theatre without paying 116 With the film War Is Hell still playing Dallas policemen arrested Oswald after a brief struggle in which Oswald drew his fully loaded gun 117 He denied shooting anyone and claimed he was being made a patsy because he had lived in the Soviet Union 118 Kennedy declared dead Johnson sworn in nbsp Cecil Stoughton s photograph of Lyndon B Johnson being sworn in as President as Air Force One prepares to depart Love Field in Dallas Jacqueline Kennedy still in her Chanel suit the blood spatters not visible here looks on At 12 38 p m Kennedy arrived in the emergency room of Parkland Memorial Hospital 119 Although Kennedy was still breathing after the shooting his personal physician George Burkley immediately saw that survival was impossible 120 121 122 After Parkland surgeons performed futile cardiac massage Kennedy was pronounced dead at 1 00 p m 30 minutes after the shooting 121 CBS host Walter Cronkite broke the news on live television 123 124 The Secret Service was concerned about the possibility of a larger plot and urged Johnson to leave Dallas and return to the White House but Johnson refused to do so without any proof of Kennedy s death 125 note 11 Johnson returned to Air Force One around 1 30 p m and shortly thereafter he received telephone calls from advisors McGeorge Bundy and Walter Jenkins advising him to depart for Washington D C immediately 127 He replied that he would not leave Dallas without Jacqueline Kennedy and that she would not leave without Kennedy s body 125 127 According to Esquire Johnson did not want to be remembered as an abandoner of beautiful widows 127 At the time of Kennedy s assassination the murder of a president was not under federal jurisdiction 128 Accordingly Dallas County medical examiner Earl Rose insisted that Texas law required him to perform an autopsy 129 130 A heated exchange between Kennedy s aides and Dallas officials nearly erupted into a fistfight before the Texans yielded and allowed Kennedy s body to be transported to Air Force One 129 130 131 At 2 38 p m with Jacqueline Kennedy at his side Johnson was administered the oath of office by federal judge Sarah Tilghman Hughes aboard Air Force One shortly before departing for Washington with Kennedy s coffin 132 Immediate aftermathAutopsy Main article John F Kennedy autopsy Where bungled autopsies are concerned President Kennedy s is the exemplar Dr Michael Baden chairman of the forensic pathology panel of the House Select Committee on Assassinations 133 President Kennedy s autopsy was performed at Bethesda Naval Hospital in Maryland on the night of November 22 Jacqueline Kennedy had selected a naval hospital as the postmortem site as President Kennedy had been a naval officer during World War II 134 135 The autopsy was conducted by three physicians naval commanders James Humes and J Thornton Boswell with assistance from ballistics wound expert Pierre A Finck Humes led the procedure 136 Under pressure from the Kennedy family and White House staffers to expedite the procedure the physicians conducted a rushed and incomplete autopsy 137 Kennedy s personal physician Rear Admiral George Burkley 138 signed a death certificate on November 23 and recorded that the cause of death was a gunshot wound to the skull 139 140 Three years after the autopsy Kennedy s brain which had been removed and preserved for later analysis was found to be missing when the Kennedy family transferred material to the National Archives 141 142 Conspiracy theorists often claim that the brain may have shown that the headshot entered from the front Alternatively the HSCA concluded that an assistant to Attorney General Robert F Kennedy the president s brother likely removed the footlocker holding the brain and other materials at his direction and he either destroyed these materials or otherwise rendered them inaccessible to prevent misuse of said material 143 or to hide the extent of the president s chronic illnesses and consequent medication 142 Some autopsy X rays and photographs have also been lost 144 Most historians regard the autopsy as the most botched segment of the government s investigation 133 The HSCA forensic pathology panel concluded that the autopsy had extensive failings including failure to take sufficient photographs failure to determine the exact exit or entry point of the head bullet not dissecting the back and neck and neglecting to determine the angles of gunshot injuries relative to body axis 145 The panel further concluded that the two doctors were not qualified to have conducted a forensic autopsy Panel member Milton Helpern Chief Medical Examiner for New York City said that selecting Humes who had only taken a single course on forensic pathology to lead the autopsy was like sending a seven year old boy who has taken three lessons on the violin over to the New York Philharmonic and expecting him to perform a Tchaikovsky symphony 146 Funeral Main articles State funeral of John F Kennedy and List of dignitaries at the state funeral of John F Kennedy nbsp Kennedy s coffin is carried from the Capitol November 25 Following the autopsy Kennedy lay in repose in the East Room of the White House for 24 hours 147 148 President Johnson issued Presidential Proclamation 3561 declaring November 25 to be a national day of mourning 149 150 and that only essential emergency workers be at their posts 151 The coffin was then carried on a horse drawn caisson to the Capitol to lie in state Hundreds of thousands of mourners lined up to view the guarded casket 152 153 with a quarter million passing through the rotunda during the 18 hours of lying in state 152 Even in the Soviet Union according to a memo by FBI Director J Edgar Hoover news of the assassination was greeted by great shock and consternation and church bells were tolled in the memory of President Kennedy 154 155 Kennedy s funeral service was held on November 25 at St Matthew s Cathedral 156 with the Requiem Mass led by Cardinal Richard Cushing 156 About 1 200 guests including representatives from over 90 countries attended 157 158 Although there was no formal eulogy 159 160 Auxiliary Bishop Philip M Hannan read excerpts from Kennedy s speeches and writings 158 After the service Kennedy was buried at Arlington National Cemetery in Virginia 161 An eternal flame was lit at his burial site in 1967 162 Killing of Oswald nbsp Robert H Jackson s photograph Jack Ruby Shoots Lee Harvey Oswald Oswald was being escorted by police detective Jim Leavelle tan suit for the transfer from the city jail to the county jail Ruby died in prison in 1967 On Sunday November 24 at 11 21 a m as Oswald was being escorted to a car in the basement of Dallas Police headquarters for the transfer from the city jail to the county jail he was shot by Dallas nightclub owner Jack Ruby The shooting was broadcast live on television 42 Robert H Jackson of the Dallas Times Herald photographed the shooting which was titled Jack Ruby Shoots Lee Harvey Oswald for which he was awarded the 1964 Pulitzer Prize for Photography 163 Drifting in and out of consciousness Oswald was taken by ambulance to Parkland Memorial Hospital he was treated by the same surgeons who had tried to save Kennedy 164 The bullet had entered his lower left chest but had not exited major heart blood vessels such as the aorta and inferior vena cava were severed and the spleen kidney and liver were hit 165 Despite surgical intervention and defibrillation Oswald died at 1 07 p m 166 Arrested immediately after the shooting Ruby testified to the Warren Commission that he had been distraught by Kennedy s death and that killing Oswald would spare Mrs Kennedy the discomfiture of coming back to trial He also stated he shot Oswald on the spur of the moment when the opportunity presented itself without considering any reason for doing so 167 Initially Ruby wished to defend himself clarification needed in his trial until his lawyer Melvin Belli dissuaded him Belli argued that Ruby had an episode of psychomotor epilepsy and was thus not responsible 168 Ruby was convicted but the decision was overturned on appeal While awaiting retrial in 1967 169 Ruby died of a pulmonary embolism secondary to cancer Like Oswald and Kennedy Ruby was declared dead at Parkland Hospital 170 Films and photographs of the assassinationMy god I saw the whole thing I saw the man s brains come out of his head Abraham Zapruder 90 nbsp The Bell amp Howell Zoomatic movie camera used by Abraham Zapruder to capture footage of the motorcade and Kennedy s killing which later came to be known as the Zapruder film The camera is preserved within the collection of the National Archives Standing on the pergola wall some 65 feet 20 m from the road 171 tailor Abraham Zapruder recorded Kennedy s killing on 26 seconds of silent 8 mm film known as the Zapruder film 172 Frame 313 captures the exact moment at which Kennedy s head explodes 173 Life magazine published frame enlargements from the Zapruder film shortly after the assassination 172 174 The footage itself was first publicly shown at the 1969 trial of Clay Shaw and on television in 1975 by Geraldo Rivera 175 In 1999 an arbitration panel ordered the federal government to pay 615 384 per second of film to Zapruder s heirs valuing the complete film at 16 million equivalent to 26 6 million in 2022 176 177 Zapruder was one of at least 32 people in Dealey Plaza known to have made film or still photographs at or around the time of the shooting 178 Most notably among the photographers Mary Moorman took several photos of Kennedy with her Polaroid including one of Kennedy less than one sixth of a second after the headshot 179 As well as Zapruder Charles Bronson Marie Muchmore and Orville Nix filmed the assassination but at farther distances than Zapruder 180 181 Of the three only Nix who filmed the assassination from the opposite side of Elm Street from Zapruder capturing the grassy knoll actually recorded the fatal shot 181 182 note 12 In 1966 Nix claimed that after he gave the film to the FBI the duplicate that they returned had frames missing or ruined Although lower quality duplicates exist the original film has been missing since 1978 182 Previously unknown footage filmed by George Jefferies was released in 2007 183 184 Recorded a few blocks before the shooting the film captures Kennedy s bunched suit jacket explaining the discrepancies between the location of the bullet hole in Kennedy s back and his jacket 185 Some films and photographs captured an unidentified woman apparently filming the assassination researchers have nicknamed her the Babushka Lady due to the shawl around her head 186 In 1978 Gordon Arnold came forward and claimed that he had filmed the assassination from the grassy knoll and that a police officer had confiscated his film 187 Arnold is not visible in any photographs taken of the area which Vincent Bugliosi author of Reclaiming History called conclusive photographic proof that Arnold s story was fabricated 188 Official investigationsDallas Police nbsp Lee Harvey Oswald in police custody At the Dallas Police headquarters officers interrogated Oswald about the shootings of Kennedy and Tippit these intermittent interviews lasted for approximately 12 hours between 2 30 p m on November 22 and 11 a m on November 24 189 Throughout Oswald denied any involvement and resorted to statements that were found to be false 190 Captain J W Fritz of the Homicide and Robbery Bureau did most of the questioning and kept only rudimentary notes 191 192 Days later Fritz wrote a report of the interrogation from notes he made afterwards 191 There were no stenographic or tape recordings Representatives of other law enforcement agencies were also present including the FBI and the Secret Service and occasionally participated in the questioning 190 Several of the FBI agents who were present wrote contemporaneous reports of the interrogation 193 On the evening of November 22 Dallas Police performed paraffin tests on Oswald s hands and right cheek in an effort to establish whether or not he had recently fired a weapon The results were positive for the hands and negative for the right cheek Such tests were unreliable 190 194 and the Warren Commission did not rely on these results 190 The Dallas police forced Oswald to host a press conference after midnight on November 23 and early in the investigation made many leaks to the media Their conduct angered Johnson who instructed the FBI to tell them to stop talking about the assassination 128 Dallas Police after the FBI expressed concerns that someone might try to kill Oswald assured federal authorities that they would provide him adequate protection 195 FBI investigation nbsp FBI Director J Edgar Hoover pictured between Robert and John F Kennedy in May 1963 wrote in a 1964 memo that we left no stone unturned 196 The FBI immediately launched an investigation into the assassination relying on a federal statute that forbade assaulting a federal officer Within 24 hours of the killing FBI Director Hoover sent President Johnson a preliminary report finding that Oswald was the sole culprit After Ruby killed Oswald Johnson decided that the Texan authorities were incompetent and instructed the FBI to conduct a complete investigation 128 On December 9 1963 the Warren Commission received the FBI s report of its investigation which concluded that three bullets had been fired the first striking Kennedy in the upper back the second striking Connally and the third striking Kennedy in the head killing him 197 The FBI continued to serve as the main investigative arm of the Warren Commission in the field A total of 169 FBI agents worked on the case conducting over 25 000 interviews and writing over 2 300 reports 196 The thoroughness of the FBI s investigation is contested Bugliosi applauded its quality and cites conspiracy theorist Harrison Edward Livingstone s praise of the FBI s commitment to following all leads 198 In its 1979 report the HSCA found that the FBI s investigation of pro and anti Castro Cubans and any connections to Oswald or Ruby was insufficient 196 The HSCA also noted that Hoover seemed determined to make the case that Oswald was the lone assassin within 24 hours of the assassination 199 Warren Commission Main article Warren Commission nbsp The Warren Commission presents its report to President Johnson From left to right John McCloy J Lee Rankin General Counsel Senator Richard Russell Congressman Gerald Ford Chief Justice Earl Warren President Lyndon B Johnson Allen Dulles Senator John Sherman Cooper and Congressman Hale Boggs On November 29 President Johnson established by executive order The President s Commission on the Assassination of President Kennedy and selected Chief Justice Earl Warren of the U S Supreme Court to chair the investigation commonly known as the Warren Commission 200 128 Its 888 page final report was presented to Johnson on September 24 1964 and made public three days later 201 It concluded that Lee Harvey Oswald had acted alone in killing Kennedy and wounding Connally and that Jack Ruby acted alone in killing Oswald 202 203 It made no conclusions as to Oswald s motive but noted his Marxism anti authoritarianism violent tendencies failure to form personal relationships and his desire to be significant in history 204 Upon examining the Zapruder film commission staffers realized that the FBI s gunshot theory was impossible The reaction times of Kennedy and Connally were too close to have been caused by two bullets from Oswald the reaction interval was less than the 2 3 seconds that it took to reload 205 206 This was one of the commission s most crucial findings that a single shot caused the non fatal wounds of Kennedy and Connally known as the single bullet theory 207 208 In May 1964 staffer Arlen Specter replicated the single bullet s trajectory via a reenactment in Dealey Plaza the bullet s path was exactly consistent with Kennedy s and Connally s wounds 209 Out of the eight commission members three Representative Hale Boggs and Senators John Cooper and Richard Russell found the theory improbable their qualms were not mentioned in the final report 210 Conspiracy theorists labelled this theory the magic bullet theory partly due to the bullet s intact and purportedly pristine state However the HSCA s Michael Baden noted that the bullet despite its lack of fragmentation was fundamentally deformed 73 In 2023 Secret Service Agent Paul Landis who had stood on the running board of Kennedy s car told The New York Times that he retrieved the magic bullet from immediately behind Kennedy s seat upon arrival at Parkland and that he placed it on Kennedy s stretcher Landis believes that the bullet dislodged from a shallow wound in Kennedy s back 211 As well as the Warren Report s 27 published volumes the commission created hundreds of thousands of pages of investigative reports and documents Relman Morin stated that Never in history was a crime probed as intensely Bugliosi concluded that the commission s basic findings have held up remarkably well 212 According to Gerald Posner the Warren report is universally derided by the American public 213 Walter Cronkite noted that Although the Warren Commission had full power to conduct its own independent investigation it permitted the FBI and the CIA to investigate themselves and so cast a permanent shadow on the answers 214 According to a 2014 report by CIA Chief Historian David Robarge then CIA director John A McCone was involved in a benign cover up by withholding information from the commission 215 Trial of Clay Shaw Main article Trial of Clay Shaw nbsp Clay Shaw pictured in 1951 was acquitted by the New Orleans jury after less than an hour of deliberation On March 22 1967 New Orleans District Attorney Jim Garrison arrested and charged New Orleans businessman Clay Shaw with conspiring to assassinate President Kennedy with the help of Oswald David Ferrie and others 216 A respected businessman who had helped renovate and preserve the French Quarter 216 Shaw was described as the unlikeliest villain since Oscar Wilde 217 Both Shaw and the neurotic avidly anti Castro Ferrie were members of New Orleans gay community 218 Ferrie died possibly by suicide four days after news of the investigation broke 219 On The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson in 1968 Garrison first publicly alleged that Shaw and Ferrie had been part of a larger CIA scheme to kill Kennedy and frame Oswald 220 In the 34 day trial conducted in 1969 221 Garrison played the Zapruder film and argued that the backwards motion of Kennedy s head after the fatal shot was indicative of a shooter in front on the grassy knoll 222 After a brief deliberation the jury found Shaw not guilty 221 Mark Lane interviewed the jurors after the trial and stated that some believed that Shaw likely was involved in a conspiracy but that there was insufficient evidence to convict 223 224 Lane s claims have been disputed by playwright James Kirkwood a personal friend of Clay Shaw who said that he met several jurors who denied ever speaking to Lane 225 226 Kirkwood also questioned Lane s claim that the jury believed that there was a conspiracy 227 jury foreman Sidney Hebert told Kirkwood I didn t think too much of the Warren Report either until the trial Now I think a lot more of it than I did before 228 According to academic E Jerald Ogg the Shaw trial is now widely regarded as a travesty of justice 229 Kirkwood likened the trial to a Spanish Inquisition hearing 230 Other observers have characterized the proceedings as relying on homophobia 231 It remains the only trial to be brought for the Kennedy assassination 216 In 1979 former CIA director Richard Helms testified that Shaw had been a part time contact of the Domestic Contact Service of the CIA through which Shaw volunteered information from his travels abroad mostly to Latin America However according to Max Holland some 150 000 Americans were contacts 232 In 1993 the PBS program Frontline obtained a group photograph that featured Ferrie and Oswald together at a 1955 cookout for the Civil Air Patrol Ferrie had denied ever knowing Oswald 233 Ramsey Clark Panel nbsp The panel organized by Attorney General Ramsey Clark pictured with President Lyndon B Johnson in 1968 found that two bullets struck Kennedy from behind Excluding Chief Justice Warren the members of Warren Commission did not view the photographs or X rays taken during Kennedy s autopsy According to Warren this was to avoid having to publicly release the explicit material to sensation mongers 234 Due to persistent speculation in February 1968 Attorney General Ramsey Clark convened a panel of four medical experts to examine the photographs and X rays from the Kennedy autopsy Their findings concurred with the Warren Commission Kennedy was struck by two bullets both from behind 235 Rockefeller Commission Main article United States President s Commission on CIA Activities within the United States In 1975 President Gerald Ford who had been a member of the Warren Commission a decade prior established the United States President s Commission on CIA Activities within the United States better known as the Rockefeller Commission after its chairman Vice President Nelson Rockefeller 236 237 The commission received a mandate to determine if any domestic activities by the CIA were unlawful and to make appropriate recommendations accordingly it also re examined the Kennedy assassination 235 nbsp The Rockefeller Commission first proposed that the backwards motion of Kennedy following the fatal shot which conspiracy theorists claim is indicative of a shot from the grassy knoll was due to a seizure like neuromuscular reaction After five months of investigation the Rockefeller Commission submitted its report to President Ford 238 The report reviewed the medical evidence and agreed that Kennedy had been killed by two shots from behind 235 Refuting Garrison s claims that the backwards motion of Kennedy s head seen on the Zapruder film was indicative of a grassy knoll shooter 222 the commission found that such a motion would be caused by a violent straightening and stiffening of the entire body as a result of a seizure like neuromuscular reaction to major damage inflicted to nerve centers in the brain 239 The later HSCA also suggested that the propulsive effect resulting from brain matter ejected from the exit wound may have been responsible 240 Pathologist Vincent Di Maio testified before the HSCA that the notion of a transfer of momentum from a grassy knoll bullet was unfounded and something from Arnold Schwarzenegger pictures 239 The Rockefeller Commission also sought to determine whether CIA operatives particularly E Howard Hunt and Frank Sturgis were present in Dealey Plaza during the assassination and whether these two men were among the three tramps pictured shortly after the assassination The commission found no evidence for these claims 237 It also inquired into purported connections between the CIA and Oswald and Ruby for which it found no evidence and concluded was farfetched speculation 237 They concluded that there was no credible evidence of CIA involvement 235 Church Committee Main article Church Committee nbsp Church Committee report Book II In 1975 following the Watergate scandal and the revelation of CIA misconduct by Seymour Hersh the CIA s so called Family Jewels the U S Senate launched the United States Senate Select Committee to Study Governmental Operations with Respect to Intelligence Activities better known as the Church Committee after its chairman Senator Frank Church 241 242 243 The committee was to investigate all improper and unlawful actions by the CIA and FBI both foreign and domestic Due to persisting theories the Church Committee organized a subcommittee staffed by Senators Richard Schweiker and Gary Hart to examine CIA and FBI conduct pertaining to the assassination 244 In its final report the Church Committee concluded that there was no evidence of a CIA or FBI led conspiracy 244 They found that the original investigation into the assassination was deficient and criticized the FBI and CIA for withholding information from the Warren Commission In particular it noted that knowledge of the CIA s many failed attempts to assassinate Castro may have significantly affected the course of the investigation 244 245 Moreover the Church Committee revealed that the CIA had conspired with the Mafia in these plots against Castro 244 246 These revelations led to further public scrutiny of the assassination 245 United States House Select Committee on Assassinations Main article United States House Select Committee on Assassinations nbsp The HSCA concurred with the Warren Commission s single bullet theory The figure illustrates how the oblong wound in Connally s back was indicative of a bullet which had been tumbling after striking an intervening object source source Of the nine member medical panel only Dr Cyril Wecht testimony above rejected the theory 247 As a result of increasing public and congressional skepticism of the Warren Commission s findings and the transparency of government agencies 245 in 1976 the House Select Committee on Assassinations was created to investigate the assassinations of Kennedy and that of Martin Luther King Jr 248 The HSCA conducted its inquiry until 1978 and issued its final report the following year concluding that Kennedy was likely assassinated as a result of a conspiracy 249 They concluded that there was a high probability that a fourth shot was fired from the grassy knoll but they stated that this shot missed Kennedy 250 Concerning the conclusions of probable conspiracy four of the twelve committee members wrote dissenting opinions 251 The HSCA also concluded that previous investigations into Oswald s responsibility were thorough and reliable but did not adequately investigate the possibility of a conspiracy and that federal agencies performed with varying degrees of competency 252 Specifically the FBI and CIA were found to be deficient in sharing information with other agencies and the Warren Commission Instead of furnishing all relevant information the FBI and CIA only responded to specific requests and were still occasionally inadequate 253 Furthermore the Secret Service did not properly analyze information it possessed prior to the assassination and was inadequately prepared to protect Kennedy 251 The chief reason for the conclusion of probable conspiracy was according to the report s dissent the subsequently discredited acoustic analysis of a police channel Dictabelt recording 250 254 255 In accordance with the recommendations of the HSCA the Dictabelt recording and acoustic evidence of a second assassin was subsequently reexamined In light of investigative reports from the FBI s Technical Services Division and a specially appointed National Academy of Sciences Committee determining that reliable acoustic data do not support a conclusion that there was a second gunman 254 the Justice Department concluded that no persuasive evidence can be identified to support the theory of a conspiracy in the Kennedy assassination 255 JFK Act and Assassination Records Review Board Main article President John F Kennedy Assassination Records Collection Act of 1992 nbsp Oliver Stone s 1991 film JFK spurred the JFK Act which mandated the release of all relevant classified files In 1991 Oliver Stone s film JFK renewed interest in the assassination and particularly in the still classified files relating to the killing In response Congress passed the JFK Records Act which called for the National Archives to collect and release all assassination related documents within 25 years 256 257 258 The act also mandated the creation of an independent office the Assassination Records Review Board to review the submitted records for completeness and continued secrecy From 1994 until 1998 the Assassination Records Review Board gathered and unsealed about 60 000 documents comprising over 4 million pages 259 260 A 1998 staff report for the Assassinations Records Review Board contended that brain photographs in the Kennedy records may not be of Kennedy s brain reportedly showing much less damage than Kennedy sustained Dr Boswell refuted these allegations 261 The board also found that conflicting with the photographic images showing no such defect several witnesses at both Parkland hospital and the autopsy remembered a large wound in the back of Kennedy s head 262 The board and board member Jeremy Gunn stressed the problems with witness testimony urging people to weigh all of the evidence with due concern for human error rather than take single statements as proof for one theory or another 263 All remaining assassination related records were scheduled to be released by October 2017 with the exception of documents certified for continued postponement by succeeding presidents due to identifiable harm to the military defense intelligence operations law enforcement or conduct of foreign relations of such gravity that it outweighs the public interest in disclosure 264 265 President Donald Trump said in October 2017 that he would not block the release of documents 265 but in April 2018 the deadline he set to release all JFK records Trump blocked the release of some records until October 2021 266 257 President Joe Biden citing the COVID 19 pandemic delayed the release further 267 268 before releasing 13 173 unredacted documents in 2022 269 A second group of files were unsealed in June 2023 at which point 99 percent of documents had been made public 269 270 Conspiracy theoriesMain article John F Kennedy assassination conspiracy theories nbsp The wooden fence on the grassy knoll where many theories claim that a second gunman stood nbsp The Badge Man can purportedly be seen firing a weapon from the grassy knoll in this expansion of the Mary Moorman photograph 179 The Kennedy assassination has been described as the mother of all conspiracies 271 For decades polls have consistently found that a majority of Americans believe there was a conspiracy 272 273 274 some 1 000 to 2 000 books mostly pro conspiracy have been written about the killing 275 Across different theories Oswald s role varies from co conspirator to entirely innocent 276 277 Common culprits include the FBI the CIA the U S military 277 the Mafia 278 the military industrial complex 278 Vice President Johnson Castro the KGB or some combination thereof 279 Bugliosi estimated that a total of 42 groups 82 assassins and 214 people had been accused in various assassination theories 280 Conspiracy theorists often argue that there were multiple shooters a triangulation of crossfire and that the fatal shot was fired from the grassy knoll and struck Kennedy in the front of the head 281 Individuals present in Dealey Plaza have been the subject of much speculation including the three tramps the umbrella man and the purported Badge Man 282 283 284 Conspiracy theorists argue that the autopsy and official investigations were flawed or at worst complicit 285 and that witnesses to the Kennedy assassination met mysterious and suspicious deaths 286 Conspiracy theories have been espoused by notable figures such as L Fletcher Prouty Chief of Special Operations for the Joint Chiefs of Staff under Kennedy who believed that elements of the U S military and intelligence communities had conspired to assassinate the president 287 Governor Connally also rejected the single bullet theory 288 289 and President Johnson reportedly expressed doubt regarding the Warren Commission s conclusions prior to his death 290 According to Robert F Kennedy Jr his father believed that the Warren Report was a shoddy piece of craftsmanship and that John F Kennedy had been killed by a conspiracy possibly involving Cuban exiles and the CIA 291 Communist rulers like Castro and Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev believed that Kennedy had been killed by right wing Americans 292 Former CIA director R James Woolsey has argued that Oswald killed Kennedy as part of a Soviet conspiracy 293 LegacyPolitical impact and memorialization nbsp Congress authorized the minting of a new 50 cent piece the Kennedy half dollar in December 1963 294 On November 27 five days after the assassination President Johnson delivered his Let Us Continue speech to Congress 295 Effectively an inaugural address 296 Johnson called for the realization of Kennedy s policies particularly on civil rights this effort soon materialized as the Civil Rights Act of 1964 297 Confusion surrounding Johnson s succession led to the Twenty fifth Amendment to the U S Constitution which was adopted in 1967 and affirmed that the vice president became president upon the president s death 298 On November 29 President Johnson issued Executive Order 11129 renaming Florida s Cape Canaveral a name borne since at least 1530 to Cape Kennedy 299 note 13 NASA s Launch Operations Center located on the cape was also renamed as the Kennedy Space Center 301 The federal government honored Kennedy in other ways such as replacing the Benjamin Franklin half dollar with the Kennedy half dollar 294 and renaming Washington D C s long planned National Culture Center as the John F Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts 302 New York City s airport was also renamed as the John F Kennedy International Airport 303 Kennedy s assassination also resulted in an overhaul of the Secret Service and its procedures Open limousines were eliminated staffing was significantly increased and specialized teams like counter sniper units were established The agency s budget has also increased from 5 5 million in 1963 equivalent to 42 million in 2013 to over 1 6 billion by the 50th anniversary in 2013 304 Cultural impact and depictions See also Assassination of John F Kennedy in popular culture They say they can t believe it It s a sacrilegious shame Now who would want to hurt such a hero of the game But you know I predicted it I knew he had to fall How did it happen Hope his suffering was small Tell me every detail for I ve got to know it all And do you have a picture of the pain Phil Ochs song Crucifixion 1966 305 John F Kennedy s assassination was the first of four major assassinations during the 1960s coming two years before the assassination of Malcolm X in 1965 and five years before the assassinations of Martin Luther King Jr and Robert F Kennedy in 1968 306 For the public Kennedy s assassination mythologized him into a heroic figure 307 Although scholars typically regard Kennedy as a good but not great president 308 public opinion polls consistently find him the most popular post WWII president 308 309 Kennedy s murder left a lasting impression on many As with the attack on Pearl Harbor of December 7 1941 and much later the September 11 attacks in 2001 asking Where were you when you heard about President Kennedy s assassination became a common topic of discussion 310 311 Journalist Dan Rather opined that the Kennedy assassination will be discussed a hundred years from now a thousand years from now in somewhat the same way as people discuss the Iliad Different people read Homer s description of the war and come to different conclusions and so it shall be for Kennedy s death 312 Along with Oliver Stone s JFK the assassination has been portrayed in several films the pro conspiracy Dalton Trumbo written Executive Action 1973 was the first feature film to depict the assassination 313 Besides explicit portrayals some critics have argued that the Zapruder film which itself has been featured in many films and television episodes advanced cinema verite or inspired more graphic depictions of violence in American cinema 173 314 315 316 Many works of literature have also explored the killing such as Don DeLillo s 1988 novel Libra in which Oswald is a CIA agent 317 James Ellroy s 1995 work American Tabloid 318 and Stephen King s 2011 time travel novel 11 22 63 319 The assassination has also been featured in several musical compositions such as Igor Stravinsky s 1964 piece Elegy for J F K and Phil Ochs 1966 song Crucifixion 320 321 which reportedly brought Robert Kennedy to tears 321 322 Other songs include Abraham Martin and John 1968 and Bob Dylan s Murder Most Foul 2020 323 324 Artifacts museums and locations today nbsp An X in the Dealey Plaza roadway marks where the fatal bullet struck Kennedy 325 In 1993 the National Park Service designated Dealey Plaza the surrounding buildings the overpass and a portion of the adjacent railyard as a National Historic Landmark District 325 The Depository and its Sixth Floor Museum operated by the city of Dallas draw over 325 000 visitors annually 326 The Boeing 707 that served as Air Force One at the time of the assassination is on display at the National Museum of the United States Air Force Kennedy s limousine is at the Henry Ford Museum 327 The Lincoln Catafalque on which Kennedy s coffin rested in the Capitol is exhibited at the Capitol Visitor Center 328 Jacqueline s pink suit autopsy X rays and President Kennedy s blood stained clothing are in the National Archives with access controlled by the Kennedy family Other items in the Archives include Parkland Hospital trauma room equipment Oswald s rifle diary and revolver bullet fragments and the limousine s windshield 327 The Texas State Archives preserve Connally s bullet punctured clothes the gun Ruby used to kill Oswald came into the possession of Ruby s brother Earl and was sold in 1991 for 220 000 equivalent to 423 000 in 2022 329 At the direction of Robert F Kennedy some items were destroyed The casket in which Kennedy s body was transported from Dallas to Washington was dropped into the sea because its public display would be extremely offensive and contrary to public policy 330 Notes and referencesNotes This photo and a similar one are known as the backyard photographs according to Bugliosi it is one of the pieces of evidence most damning for Oswald Oswald told Dallas police that the photographs were not genuine and that someone must have superimposed his head 15 Marina Oswald testified that she took the pictures 16 In 1964 KGB Agent Yuri Nosenko defected to the United States He divulged that Soviet intelligence surveilled Oswald regarded him as mentally unstable and had no association with him 24 Although the FBI trusted Nosenko the CIA believed that he was a mole and convinced the Warren Commission not to interview him 25 At Oswald s request he met with FBI Special Agent John Quigley while in custody Posner cites this as proof that Oswald was not a government agent questioning why he might blow his cover 39 Jack Dougherty the only witness who saw Oswald enter the Depository on the morning of the assassination testified to the Warren Commission that he did not remember seeing Oswald with any package 44 Bugliosi questioned his reliability as a witness Dougherty s father told FBI agents on November 23 that his son had considerable difficulty in coordinating his mental facilities with his speech 45 After the first shot witness Virgie Rachley an employee at the Texas School Book Depository reported seeing sparks on the pavement shortly behind the president s limousine 62 Student Billy Harper later found a fragment of Kennedy s skull on the road 80 The journalists pictured with them arrived as the end of the motorcade passed through Dealey Plaza 89 Bugliosi notes that Lee Bowers Jr did not mention the commotion in an earlier affidavit in which Bowers did take time to list all other suspicious happenings like circling vehicles with Goldwater for 64 stickers Moreover conspiracy theorist Jim Moore questions whether Bowers could even have seen the area Bowers testified that he threw the red on red signal just after the fatal shot but the grassy knoll was partially obstructed from Bowers position at the work panel 95 Three spent cartridges were found on the floor One live round was found in the rifle Dallas policemen thoroughly photographed the rifle before its removal 104 Lieutenant Day of the Dallas police examined the weapon prior to its seizure by the FBI He found and photographed fingerprints on the trigger housing Although Day believed the prints to be those of Oswald s right middle and ring fingers the ridges were not clear enough to make a positive identification Day then discovered a palm print on the barrel underneath the wooden stock He tentatively identified it as Oswald s but was not able to photograph or analyze it in more depth as the FBI took the Carcano 108 In D C FBI fingerprint expert Sebastian Latona found the photographs and extant prints to be insufficient as to make any conclusion The rifle was returned to the Dallas police on November 24 107 Five days later the FBI made a positive identification using a card from Day 109 At the time of Kennedy s assassination most of his cabinet was on a trip to Japan 126 Nix himself believed that the shots had come from the grassy knoll 182 In 1973 due to Floridians discontent with the change Florida Governor Reubin Askew mandated that Cape Kennedy be referred to as Cape Canaveral on all state documents and maps The U S Board of Geographic Names accepted the name change later that year 300 Citations John F Kennedy The White House John F Kennedy A Featured Biography United States Senate a b Bugliosi 1998 p xi 1960 Electoral College Results National Archives 1960 The Cold War John F Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum Sabato 2013 pp 422 423 Hinckle amp Turner 1981 pp ix 15 18 Jones 2008 pp 41 50 94 Borger 2022 Bugliosi 2007 pp 13 16 Bugliosi 2008 pp 17 23 Warren 1964 p 28 a b c d e Warren 1964 p 40 White 1965 p 3 Bugliosi 2007 p 792 Bugliosi 2007 p 793 Pontchartrain 2019 Warren 1964 p 683 a b Posner 1993 p 28 Posner 1993 pp 17 19 Posner 1993 pp 32 33 Posner 1993 pp 32 33 46 Posner 1993 pp 46 53 Posner 1993 pp 34 36 Posner 1993 pp 38 39 Warren 1964 p 697 Posner 1993 p 53 McMillan 1977 pp 64 65 a b Warren 1964 p 712 Warren 1964 p 714 Posner 1993 pp 82 83 85 100 Summers 2013 pp 152 160 Warren 1964 p 183 Warren 1964 p 403 Posner 1993 pp 125 127 Warren 1964 pp 728 729 Summers 2013 p 211 Posner 1993 pp 151 152 Posner 1993 pp 153 155 Posner 1993 pp 172 190 Warren 1964 pp 14 15 a b Bagdikian 1963 p 26 Bugliosi 2007 pp 6 165 Bugliosi 2007 p 819 Bugliosi 2007 p 820 Warren 1964 pp 130 135 Bugliosi 2007 pp 23 24 a b Testimony of Kenneth P O Donnell Warren Commission Hearings Blaine 2011 p 196 Bugliosi 2008 pp 25 41 Bugliosi 2007 pp 29 Bugliosi 2008 p 30 Bugliosi 2007 pp 19 20 30 38 49 November 22 1963 Death of the President John F Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum Bugliosi 2008 p 51 Bugliosi 2008 pp 56 57 Bugliosi 2008 pp 56 58 McAdams 2012 Warren 1964 p 110 Warren 1964 p 49 Bugliosi 2008 pp 58 60 a b Bugliosi 2007 p 39 Bugliosi 2007 pp xxix 458 HSCA Appendix to Hearings Vol VI p 29 a b c d Testimony of Gov John Bowden Connally Jr Warren Commission Hearings Bugliosi 2008 p 61 Bugliosi 2008 p 62 Warren 1964 pp 18 19 Stokes 1979 pp 41 46 Testimony of Dr Robert Roeder Shaw Warren Commission Hearings Bugliosi 2008 pp 61 62 a b Sabato 2013 p 216 a b Posner 1993 pp 335 336 Warren 1964 pp 85 96 a b Testimony of Clyde A Haygood Warren Commission Hearings Bugliosi 2008 pp 63 64 Warren 1964 pp 111 115 Bugliosi 2007 pp xx 501 Testimony of Bobby W Hargis Warren Commission Hearings Summers 2013 p 45 Bugliosi 2007 p 29 a b Testimony of Clinton J Hill Special Agent Secret Service Warren Commission Hearings Testimony of Mrs John F Kennedy Warren Commission Hearings Testimony of Mrs John Bowden Connally Jr Warren Commission Hearings Bugliosi 2007 p 42 Sabato 2013 p 221 Holland 2014 Testimony of James Thomas Tague Warren Commission Hearings Trask 1994 pp 38 40 a b Trask 1994 p 76 Summers 2013 pp 56 57 a b c Bugliosi 2007 p 852 Summers 2013 p 35 Bugliosi 2007 p 898 Bugliosi 2007 pp 898 899 Bugliosi 2008 p 80 Bugliosi 2008 p 81 Testimony of Howard Brennan Warren Commission Hearings Bugliosi 2008 p 64 Summers 2013 p 62 Bugliosi 2008 p 60 Bugliosi 2007 p 40 Warren 1964 p 645 Bugliosi 2007 pp 86 87 Warren 1964 p 118 Warren 1964 p 122 a b Bugliosi 2007 p 801 Bugliosi 2007 p 800 Bugliosi 2007 pp 801 802 Warren 1964 p 124 Warren 1964 p 79 Bugliosi 2008 pp 110 111 151 Bugliosi 2008 pp 122 124 127 Bugliosi 2008 pp 93 94 Bugliosi 2007 pp 94 95 101 Bugliosi 2008 pp 150 152 Bugliosi 2008 p 153 Bugliosi 2007 p 161 Bugliosi 2008 p 85 Biographical sketch of Dr George Gregory Burkley Arlington National Cemetery a b Huber 2007 pp 380 393 Bugliosi 2008 p 93 Walter Cronkite On The Assassination Of John F Kennedy NPR Daniel 2007 pp 87 88 a b Boyd 2015 pp 59 62 Ball 1982 p 107 a b c Jones 2013 a b c d Kurtz 1982 p 2 a b Munson 2012 a b Stafford 2012 Bugliosi 2007 p 110 President Lyndon B Johnson takes Oath of Office 22 November 1963 John F Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum a b Bugliosi 2007 p 382 Associated Press 1963 pp 29 31 Sabato 2013 p 22 Bugliosi 2007 pp 139 140 Sabato 2013 p 213 Bugliosi 2007 pp 137 138 Oswald s Ghost PBS Burkley 1963 Bugliosi 2007 p 431 a b Saner 2013 Bugliosi 2007 p 432 Kurtz 1982 p 9 Bugliosi 2007 pp 382 383 Bugliosi 2007 p 384 Associated Press 1963 pp 36 37 56 57 68 The New York Times 2003 pp 197 201 Associated Press 1963 p 40 American Heritage 1964 pp 52 53 Government Offices Closed by President The Washington Post a b White 1965 p 16 NBC News 1966 pp 106 107 110 114 115 119 123 133 134 Neuman 2017 Hoover 1963 a b White 1965 p 17 Associated Press 1963 p 93 a b NBC News 1966 p 126 Associated Press 1963 pp 94 96 Spivak 1963 White 1965 p 18 President John Fitzgerald Kennedy Gravesite Arlington National Cemetery Fischer 2003 p 206 Bugliosi 2008 pp 450 451 Bugliosi 2008 pp 451 452 458 459 Bugliosi 2008 p 465 Testimony of Jack Ruby Warren Commission Hearings 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Walter Cronkite On The Assassination Of John F Kennedy NPR November 22 2013 Archived from the original on June 28 2022 Retrieved June 7 2023 Who Was Lee Harvey Oswald Frontline PBS Archived from the original on September 30 2007 Retrieved September 30 2007 1960 Electoral College Results National Archives November 5 2019 Archived from the original on April 22 2023 Retrieved May 16 2023 External links nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Assassination of John F Kennedy The Sixth Floor Museum at Dealey Plaza archived May 26 2008 The President John F Kennedy Assassination Records Collection National Archives and Records Administration JFK Assassination A look back at the death of President John F Kennedy 50 years ago CBS News November 22 1963 Death of the President John F Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum Weisberg Collection on the JFK Assassination Internet Archive LIFE Magazine Nov 25 1966 John F Kennedy Assassination Collection finding aid at University of Texas at Arlington Libraries Special Collections via Texas Archival Resources Online TARO Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Assassination of John F Kennedy amp oldid 1207194260, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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