Kennedys Assassination
Essay by review • December 19, 2010 • Essay • 482 Words (2 Pages) • 1,710 Views
On November 22, 1963, at 12:30 in the afternoon, President John F. Kennedy was shot at and killed while participating in a motorcade in Dallas, Texas. The most important question that arises from this incident is 'Who killed President John F. Kennedy?' This is an issue which has been debated by scholars, The Government, and even common people alike. Many people seem to feel that it was a conspiracy, some large cover-up within a cover-up. Some theories are that it was organized by the CIA, Fidel Castro, an Anarchist group, even by Vice-President Lyndon Johnson. However, once all the evidence is examined, it appears that the assassination was done by a lone man. So much of the evidence, from the way the assassination occurred, to the details of the alleged assassins' life, and even to the official government findings and a film of the assassination, all point to the fact that there was no conspiracy and that Kennedy was killed by a lone gunman, Lee Harvey Oswald. Evidence that proves Oswald's guilt are as follows; Oswald was pro-Communist, and hated America. He was in the Depository at the time of the assassination, and searches of the building found evidence of his work. The rifle with his finger prints on it was found by a make-shift snipers nest. Witnesses on the day claimed to see the shots fired from the sixth story window of the Depository. Oswald was one of the few working in the building on that day, which raises even more suspicion about him. Oswald had access to all the materials needed to kill the President. The fact that Oswald killed the police officer questioning him speaks volumes about his guilt as well. Despite the testimony of the witnesses, perhaps the clearest evidence of Oswald's guilt comes from footage of the assassination and the official government report. The Zapruder Film is the only known footage of the assassination. Using a camera with a speed of 18 frames a second, the assassination became re-playable. The film was slowed down, and the exact moments of the bullets impacts were found. From the angle at which the President was hit, the shots had to be fired from an elevated level in the rear. Namely, the sixth story window of the Book Depository. The shots were all fired from the same angle, making theories of a second or third gunman impossible. Thus, much of the evidence supports the theory of Oswald's guilt as the sole assassin. He was Anti-American, had suffered from mental
...
...