SECTION ONE
The Evidence
President Kennedy, per the government’s version, was assassinated by a lone gunman, Lee Harvey Oswald, who acted entirely on his own, firing three shots from his “sniper’s nest” on the sixth floor of the Texas School Book Depository building, from behind the President’s motorcade with a Mannlicher-Carcano 6.5 millimeter Italian rifle that was owned by the assassin. Only three shots were fired and they all came from the rear, after the motorcade had passed the window of that building.
Approximately forty-five minutes after killing President Kennedy, the same assassin then shot and killed Dallas Police Officer J. D. Tippit in a different section of town and was then arrested inside a nearby movie theater. The Warren Commission, a body of elite officials entrusted with the official investigation, “found no evidence that Oswald was involved with any person or group in a conspiracy to assassinate the President”; “there was no evidence to support the speculation that Oswald was an agent, employee, or informant of the FBI, the CIA, or any other governmental agency”; “No direct or indirect relationship between Lee Harvey Oswald and Jack Ruby” (the Dallas nightclub owner who murdered Oswald two days after the assassination) and “no evidence of conspiracy, subversion, or disloyalty to the U.S. Government by any Federal, State, or local official.”20
The official government version of the JFK assassination is incorrect and that’s a fact that has already been proven—you just haven’t heard it yet from any of our government’s gatekeepers in the mainstream media. I plan to prove that to you far beyond any reasonable questions of doubt.
Because, just for openers, those official conclusions above mean that there were no shots from the front and that there were three gunshots and three gunshots only.
Well guess what, folks? That simply isn’t true. And that’s not just some opinion of mine—that can and has been proven scientifically. So please keep reading, because I won’t just give you some good reasons or theories that raise the possibility that they’re wrong—I’ll give you 63 points that prove it and will give you a pretty good idea of who the real perpetrators were.
20 “Report of the President’s Commission on the Assassination of President Kennedy,” September 24, 1964: home.comcast.net/~ceoverfield/warren.html