An industry has arisen to continue the mythology.
Oswald
was not capable of such violence; he could not have made the shots in
the time allotted; the rifle was inferior and the scope was misaligned;
he had an alibi; there is no record of his interrogation by the Dallas
police; he was an imposter from Russia; the "Oswald" in Mexico City was
an imposter; his pictures holding the rifle with the pistol and the two
Communist newspapers are fakes; he travelled with Cuban revolutionaries;
the rifle found on the depository sixth floor was a Mauser, not Oswald's Italian infantry rifle Model 1891/1938; the third
shot--the head shot--came from the front; a second shooter was seen on
the "grassy knoll;" the Dallas doctors disagreed with the Bethesda
pathologists; three tramps in a box car in Dallas were likely CIA and
were probably involve--one even looked like Woody Harrelson's father;
Tippit's murderer was unidentified; the bullets that killed Tippit did not match
Oswald's pistol; many involved have died suspiciously; the Mafia did it because of their annimosity to Bobby Kennedy; the CIA did it because of their fear of a Kennedy retaliation over the Bay of Pigs invasion; the Garrison argument implicating Clay Shaw (on the evidence of a psychotic who
failed a lie detector test); Castro did it in self defense; the JFK movie by Stone (see Garrison); the
Navy pathologist burnt his notes; the Dallas FBI burnt a note Oswald
left for them before the murder; Marina Oswald burnt photographs of Lee
holding the rifle, Ruby killed Tippit, Tippit was meeting Oswald and was involved, .....on and on.
The democracy is hard at work here. Many of these notions come from average and concerned people, volunteers working far afield. Some are lawyers. Few are experts in the area they are focused on in the murder. One writer on the Zapruder film and what it reveals about the number of bullets and their timing is a Kierkegaard lecturer from Haverford. Some of these objections are just nuts, some are true but, of those that are true, none would change anything.
What is certain is this:
1.
Oswald bought the murder weapon from a mail order house using an alias
he always used and had the false ID in his wallet at his arrest. Oswald
posed with the rifle holding communist newspapers; his wife
took the picture. Marina saw the rifle many times and knew where it was
kept.
2. Before going to shoot Gen. Walker, a
right-wing John Birch Society member, Oswald wrote a detailed letter to
Marina explaining what he was going to do and what she should do if he
were killed or did not come back.
3. He shot at Walker and the window slat diverted the bullet. He then fled the state for New Orleans.
4.
The day of the murder he left his wedding ring in a glass by his wife's bed, then carried the
gun to the depository wrapped in paper (later found at the shooting
site) in a car driven by a fellow worker.
5. He was seen and described by a witness as he pushed the gun out of the window and the muzzle fire of 3 shots were seen.
6.
Men at the window' one floor down and directly below the sniper's nest on the sixth floor of the depository, heard the gunfire
above, heard the bolt action and heard the casings hit the floor.
7. Oswald was seen in the depository after the shooting; he left the building and took a bus, then a cab, to his rooming house where he got his pistol.
7. Oswald was seen in the depository after the shooting; he left the building and took a bus, then a cab, to his rooming house where he got his pistol.
8. Officer Tippit was a well regarded,
simple guy and a solid citizen. At least ten people saw him murdered by
Oswald and all identified him. Three bullets hit him in the chest. Oswald
stepped away, then returned several steps to put a bullet in Officer
Tippitt's temple as he lay on the ground.
9. Ruby
killed Oswald but his motives are obscure. It may not even have been
planned. All acquaintences said he was distraught over Kennedy's death
and the possibility that Jackie, whom he adored, would have to return to Dallas to go
through a trial with Oswald. (The only press interview he ever gave was
to Dorothy Kilgallen. Kilgallen!)
Any theory about the killing has to include and accept these facts.
Any theory about the killing has to include and accept these facts.
Now a conspiracy. Jack Childs was a spy/raconteur who knew Castro. He says Castro told him that when Oswald realized the Cubans would not grant him a visa when he was in Mexico City he screamed with defiant bravado, "I'm going to kill Kennedy!" This was confirmed by the spy Rodriques Lahera in a debriefing with Harold Swenson. In November 1963, the Cuban intelligence officer in charge of monitoring possible CIA/exile activity against Cuba, Florintino Aspillaga, was told by Castro to abandon his usual sweeps and focus all his listening devices on the Dallas area.
So.....? The specifics of the assassination are beyond debate. Oswald, a defector to Russia, a communist disillusioned with the Russian system but enamored with the Cuban one, murdered President Kennedy. The only question is whether someone or some group influenced Oswald's decision. Castro may not have been involved. But it sounds as if he was not surprised.
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