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On the afternoon of 22 November 1963, John Fitzgerald Kennedy, The 35th President of the United States of American was riding in his presidential limousine with his wife Jacqueline and Texas Governor John Connally, and his wife Nellie.

At 12:30, he was fatally shot by former U.S. Marine Lee Harvey Oswald. Governor Connally was seriously wounded in the attack but managed to survive. The motorcade rushed to the Parkland Memorial Hospital where President Kennedy was pronounced dead about 30 minutes after the shooting.

John F Kennedy
John F. Kennedy, 1957. (Credit: Hank Walker/The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty Images)

Lee Harvey Oswald was arrested by the Dallas Police department in 20 minutes after the shooting. Oswald was charged with the murder of the President and a Dallas policeman J.D. Tippit, who had been shot a short time after the assassination.

When Oswald was being transferred from City jail to the county jail, Jack Ruby, a nightclub operator shot him. He was rushed to the Parkland Memorial Hospital where he soon died.

After the after Warren Commission did a 10-month investigation they concluded that Oswald assassinated Kennedy and acted entirely alone, and the Ruby also had acted alone in killing Oswald.

A later investigation, the United States House Select Committee on Assassinations (HSCA) agreed with the Warren Commission that the injuries that Kennedy and Connally sustained were caused by Oswald’s three rifle shots, but they also concluded that Kennedy was “probably assassinated as a result of a conspiracy”

According to the house select committee on assassinations “The committee believes, on the basis of the evidence available to it, that President John F. Kennedy was probably assassinated as a result of a conspiracy. The committee is unable to identify the other gunman or to the extent of the conspiracy. “

Further analysis resulted in a high probability that two gunmen fired at the president.

The death of president was more than just a madman shooting the president with no clear motive.

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Who Killed JFK? — JFK Conspiracy theories

If Vincent Bugliosi, the author, and attorney is to be believed: If we add all the people accused of assassinating President John F Kennedy and all of the conspiracy theories they were taking part in, you’d wind up with at least 42 different groups, 82 individual assassins, and 214 people playing some kind of role in the crime.

Lyndon B. Johnson Conspiracy

A Poll by Gallup in 2003 indicated that nearly 20% of Americans suspected vice president Lyndon B. Johnson of being involved in the assassination of Kennedy for political gain in power.

This started before JFK was elected for president, Johnson had attempted to take the democratic nomination from JFK at the 1960 democratic convention in Los Angeles.

According to the book, The death of the resident by William Manchester Lyndon asked the president to continue part of his old job as Texas senator.

There were also rumors that Lyndon might be dropped from the reelection ticket the following year.

The Warren Commission also accused Johnson of plotting the assassination because he disliked the “Kennedys” and feared that he would be dropped from the Democratic ticket for the 1964 election.

Lyndon and JFK apparently had words the day before the assassination, Lyndon also played a big part in JFK going to Dallas in the first place.

As Lyndon no longer had political control of Texas, which turned out to be an important swing state necessary for JFK’s reelection. As a result JFK reluctantly went to Dallas to solve the political crisis .

Texas was Lyndon’s home turf, and JFK felt Lyndon should have had it handled. Lyndon’s right hand man had been actually warned by a high profile Texas lawyer named Byron Skelton.

Bryon Skeleton feared for the president’s safety but the president was not informed, though this information was also received by his brother, Robert Kennedy

Furthermore, while there is evidence that Lyndon wasn’t happy with being a Vice president, there is nothing to support his role in the assassination of JFK.

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The mob assassinated JFK

The Kennedys were no stranger to crimes. In fact, many believe that the mafia helped JFK steal the election in 1960 by securing the votes in the key state of Illinois.

Three mob groups separately claimed that they were responsible for JFK’s assassination.

  1. The Chicago Mob
  2. The Miami Mob
  3. New Orleans Mob

Jack Ruby, who killed Oswald was a Dallas nightclub owner who some theorize had mafia connections. Some even believe that the mob was working in collusion with the CIA to carry out the Kennedy hit.

This hypothesis depends on the way that Kennedy was unsuccessful in ousting Fidel Castro in Cuba, which means the mafia-run club remained shutdown, and that his sibling, Robert Kennedy, was getting serious about the crowd in his job as lawyer general, seeking after an argument against Jimmy Hoffa

In 2015, an imprisoned former Mafia Hitman, James Files claimed to have been the second shooter in the assassination. Jame said he was apart of a plot in collaboration between the Mafia and the CIA.

However, there’s no evidence supporting this. Perhaps the most compelling aspect of the mob and CIA theory comes from JFK’s supposed ties to Sam Giancana, the head of the Chicago Syndicate at the time.

JFK’s father had worked with Sam Giancana in the bootlegging industry during the prohibition. There were rumors that the mob helped Kennedy win the 1960 election.

JFK and Giancana reportedly shared a mistress, at different times named Campbell Exner.

Giancana was supposed to testify about his role in a CIA assassination plot in 1975 when he himself was assassinated. This just adds more layers to the assassination of the president.

It’s accepted that New Orleans supervisor Carlos Marcello, who despised the Kennedy family, gotten the murdering to his colleagues on Corsica, on hypothesis that it would get Robert Kennedy away from them. Be that as it may, no examination has ever turned up dependable connections between the gatherings, and with all the players expired, it stays only a hypothesis.

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Russians did it?

Obviously there was tension between the two nation with the cold war. Oswald had tried to defect the Soviet Union before. Some theorize that Oswald could’ve been acting as s KGB agent.

Oswald was also inexplicably at the Russian Embassy in Mexico city a few weeks before the Kennedy assassination.

Though it’s worth mentioning that Oswald would not be a smart option for the Russians to use, since he would immediately cast suspicions on Russia, due to his well-known ties with Russia.

CIA behind the Assassination of JFK?

Allen Dulles, the former head of the CIA was actually on the Warren Commission and CIA withheld information from Warren Commission

CIA behind the assassination of JFK

The CIA now refers to this as a “Benign Coverup.” There are multiple theories behind the involvment of CIA behind the assassination of JFK.

Some feel that JFK may have found out that the CIA had a plot to assassinate Fidel Castro. CIA felt Kennedy might have a different agenda or even disband them, so they plotted to assassinate him.

Forensic historian, Patrick Nolan wrote a book entitled CIA rogues and the killing of the Kennedys, in which he theorized that four high-level agents not only planned the shooting but three of them fired four shots during the assassination.

People also believe that CIA could’ve picked Oswald to carry out the hit as he was a known cimmunist and Russian sympathizer.

Another possible CIA motive was that after the failed Bay of Pigs invasion into Cuba. CIA underwent personnel changes at the hand of Kennedy which may have upset them.

During the bay of pigs invasion, Kennedy refused to offer additional US military support.

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The Umbrella Man

Why would someone carry an umbrella on a sunny day? In the Zapruder film and photos were taken at the time of the shooting you can see, a man standing alone, holding an open umbrella above his head.

the umbrella man

At first, a glance may seem pretty normal but there are two things that make it unusual.

  • It wasn’t raining, despite the rain in Dallas the night before, nobody in the crowd, as far as pictures are concerned is holding an umbrella.
  • The second and more dubious occurrence is the fact that Kennedy is struck by the first bullet as the car passes in front of this umbrella man.

Some believe that the umbrella man appeared to lift his umbrella a foot or so. Both of these things have led many to believe that the umbrella was a signal was to another gunman or the umbrella was itself was a spy-life weapon that could fire darts. Perhaps explaining the slight hole in JFK’s neck.

In 1978, Louie Steven Witt approached and recognized himself as the “umbrella man”. Affirming before the United States House Select Committee on Assassinations, Witt expressed he carried the umbrella to irritate Kennedy and dissent the submission approaches of the president’s dad, Joseph Kennedy.

He added: “I think if the Guinness Book of World Records had a category for people who were at the wrong place at the wrong time, doing the wrong thing, I would be No. 1 in that position, without even a close runner-up.” Some researchers have noted a number of inconsistencies with Witt’s story, however, and do not believe him to be the true “umbrella man”

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Badge man on the Grassy Knoll

In 1964, the Warren Commission concluded that Lee Harvey Oswald acted alone and Jack Ruby also acted alone when he killed Oswald two days later, but most people don’t seem to accept that this assassination was the work of a lone gunman.

Bill and Gayle Newman
Bill and Gayle Newman drop to the grass and cover their children. The Newmans said that they thought the fatal shot came from behind them. Wikimedia commons

The house of the representative is blamed for the enduring conspiracy theory. In 1976, the select committee on Assassinations, which reinvestigated JFK’s killing as well as Martin Luther King Jr.’s concluded that there was “probably” the second shooter on the “grassy knoll,” a hill overlooking the site where Kennedy was assassinated in the motorcade.

The “badge man” figure — so-called as he appears to be wearing a uniform similar to that worn by a policeman, with a badge prominent — helped fuel conspiracy theories linking Dallas Police officers, or someone impersonating a police officer, to the assassination

In 1982, yet another committee examined the evidence. The national academy of Sciences Committee on Ballistic Acoustics found that “reliable acoustic data do not support that there was the second gunman.”

But the theory live on.

Cuban government conspiracy

In its report, the Warren Commission expressed that it had researched “many charges of a conspiratorial contact among Oswald and specialists of the Cuban Government” and had discovered no proof of Cuban inclusion in the death of President Kennedy.

The House Select Committee on Assassinations likewise stated: “The board of trustees accepts, based on the proof accessible to it, that the Cuban Government was not associated with the death of President Kennedy.”

Fidel Castro, Cuban Revolutionary
Fidel Castro, Cuban Revolutionary (Image:Paul Hosefros/The New York Times)

However, some intrigue scholars keep on asserting that Fidel Castro requested the death of Kennedy in reprisal for the CIA’s past endeavors to kill him.

In 1977, Castro was met by newsman Bill Moyers. Castro denied any inclusion in Kennedy’s passing, saying:

It would have been absolute insanity by Cuba. … It would have been a provocation. Needless to say, it would have been to run the risk that our country would have been destroyed by the United States. Nobody who’s not insane could have thought about [killing Kennedy in retaliation].

When Castro was interviewed later in 2013 by Atlantic editor, Jeffrey Goldberg, Castro said:

“There were people in the American government who thought Kennedy was a traitor because he didn’t invade Cuba when he had the chance when they were asking him. He was never forgiven for that.”

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Federal Reserve Conspiracy

Jim Marrs, in his book Crossfire, introduced the theory that Kennedy was attempting to get control over the influence of the Federal Reserve, and that powers contradicted to such activity may have had probably some impact in the assassination.

John F Kennedy (Image: CORBIS)

According to Marrs, the issuance of Executive Order 11110 was an exertion by Kennedy to move influence from the Federal Reserve to the United States Department of the Treasury by supplanting Federal Reserve Notes with silver certificates.

Actor and writer Richard Belzer named the people in question in this hypothesis as American “extremely rich people, influence representatives, and brokers … working pair with the CIA and other thoughtful specialists of the legislature

Oswald Couldn’t Have Fired The Shots

A famous hypothesis identified with the JFK death is that Lee Harvey Oswald couldn’t have pulled off the deed all alone on the grounds that he was utilizing a junky, 60-year-old Carcano 91 rifle that was difficult to point; he needed more expertise or time to shoot three shots in eight seconds; and he was certifiably not a sufficient marksman to do as such. In this way, another person HAD to have been included – in light of the fact that no one has ever had the option to copy what he did.

In any case, Oswald didn’t should be a world-class marksman to do what he did – only a prepared one. Also, he was – a previous Marine, truth be told. The Carcano rifle he was utilizing wasn’t an old bit of garbage, yet an all around manufactured and precise weapon. This specific one had been made in 1940. Oswald was terminating at a moderate moving objective under 90 yards away. This isn’t even 50% of the 200 yards Marines shoot at during rifle capability.

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It’s likewise essential to recollect that Oswald didn’t have eight seconds to make three shots – he had eight seconds to make two shots. The clock began when the main shot was discharged. For a prepared Marine with a quality rifle, a moderate and close objective is a fantasy worked out. Indeed, even without the utilization of an “enchantment slug.”

With respect to the case that the shooting has never been copied, this is basically bogus. The Warren Commission employed three marksmen to copy the three shots, and CBS did so again quite a while later. These shooters had less time than Oswald, had never prepared on the Carcano rifle, and many were as yet ready to hit the objective two out of multiple times.

The Illuminati Took Him Out

Genuine conspiracy theorists realize that Illuminati is behind everything that happens all over the place, calling the shots to guarantee they end up with boundless influence and cash. Along these lines, in the event that anybody was going to take out JFK, who was probably one of them, it would have been the shadowy cabal.

illuminati took him out

For what reason would they have done it? Conceivably on the grounds that he’d split away, or just to build their cash and force.

Theories encompassing the death of the President started very quickly. They included everything from observers on the grass close to the motorcade to incredible agents to outside forces to the standard intrigue backups like the Illuminati.

From that point forward, incalculable books have been composed, two separate commissions were framed (which reached extraordinary and questioned resolutions), and unending pontificating rambled. While connivance scholars keep on demanding that others were included, up until now, their speculations stay only that: theories, which continues to lives on.

Now that you’ve read about the conspiracies surrounding JFK’s death, you might also like the conspiracy behind a man who jumped from an airplane, then read about 10 Mysterious Books from History that no one has an explanation about.

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