Who Killed President Kennedy?
This series of essays isn’t going to give you the answer, but it will try to illustrate the best way to think about the question.
Much of the evidence in the JFK assassination is inconclusive and open to a variety of interpretations. There are, however, some basic, indisputable, uncontroversial facts. These facts suggest only two realistic solutions, both of which revolve around the role of Lee Harvey Oswald:
- either Oswald killed Kennedy, with or without associates,
- or he was set up in advance to take the blame.
The Basic Facts of the JFK Assassination
On 22 November 1963, President John F. Kennedy was a passenger in a motorcade through the centre of Dallas, Texas. At about 12:30pm, the motorcade was in Dealey Plaza, just outside the downtown area, when several gunshots were fired.1 Altogether, three people were injured:
- President Kennedy was wounded in the back and the throat, and, fatally, in the head.2
- The governor of Texas, John Connally, who was sitting directly in front of Kennedy, sustained three wounds:
- one bullet hit him in the back, destroyed four inches of one rib, punctured his right lung, and came out of the right side of his chest;
- his right wrist was shattered;
- and a fragment of a bullet was embedded in his left thigh.3
- A bystander, James Tague, received a slight cut on the cheek from the impact of a bullet to the concrete curb near his feet.4
The Bullet Shells and the Rifle
At the time of the shooting, the presidential limousine was heading west on Elm Street, and had just passed the Texas School Book Depository, which contained publishers’ offices and a book warehouse. A window was half open at the eastern end of the sixth floor of the building.5 Three empty bullet shells were discovered just inside this window. Elsewhere on the sixth floor, a rifle was discovered. Tests showed that those bullet shells had been fired from that rifle.6
Lee Harvey Oswald and the Sixth–Floor Rifle
The rifle had been purchased several months earlier by mail order. The name on the mail order coupon was a pseudonym known to have been used elsewhere by Lee Harvey Oswald. The handwriting on the coupon matched Oswald’s. The supplier had sent the rifle to a post office box rented by Oswald.7
Oswald at the Scene of the Crime
Oswald worked in the Texas School Book Depository, and had legitimate access to the sixth floor. He claimed to have been elsewhere at the time of the shooting, but there were no eye–witnesses to support his alibi.
Two Solutions to the JFK Assassination
On the face of it, this is an open–and–shut case: Oswald did it. The only realistic alternative is that Oswald had been carefully framed in advance.
The other, purely theoretical, solution, that some other lone nut happened to stumble across Oswald’s rifle and decided to take a few pot shots at the president, is too unlikely to be worth considering.
Either Oswald did it, or he was set up. Let’s examine each of these options in turn.
- Did Lee Harvey Oswald Kill President Kennedy?
Notes
- The basic, uncontested facts of the JFK assassination can be found in the Warren Report.
- President Kennedy’s wounds: Warren Report, pp.86ff.
- For Governor Connally’s chest wound, see Warren Commission Hearings, vol.4, p.104. For his wrist wound, see Warren Commission Hearings, vol.4, pp.118ff.
- James Tague’s wound: Warren Report, p.116.
- This is the American definition of ‘sixth floor’; in the UK it would be the fifth floor. All such references will use the American definition.
- For the discovery of the bullet shells and the rifle, see e.g. Warren Commission Hearings, vol.6, pp.300f. The bullet shells were matched to the rifle by Robert Frazier of the FBI: Warren Commission Hearings, vol.3, pp.421ff.
- A photograph of the envelope and mail order coupon for the rifle: Warren Commission Hearings, vol.19, p.275. Identification of the handwriting as Oswald’s: Warren Commission Hearings, vol.24, p.759 (Commission Exhibit 2145). For Oswald’s use of post office boxes, see Warren Commission Hearings, vol.20, p.177. For Oswald’s use of ‘A. Hidell’ as an alias, see The Career of Lee Harvey Oswald below. The man now universally known as Lee Harvey Oswald rarely used his middle name except in official documents; he usually called himself either Lee Oswald or, in the American fashion, Lee H. Oswald.
- According to a report by FBI agents who interviewed the suspect, “OSWALD claimed to be on the first floor when President JOHN F. KENNEDY passed this building” (Warren Report, p.613). The most detailed account of Oswald’s alibi is in a report by Captain J.W. Fritz of the Dallas police: “I asked him what part of the building he was in at the time the president was shot, and he said that he was having his lunch about that time on the first floor” (ibid., p.600). Some researchers have claimed that Oswald would surely have been questioned comprehensively about his activities and location at the time of the shooting, and that pertinent information from the interviews may have been deliberately omitted from the reports. Others have pointed out that Oswald was consistently unhelpful to his interviewers, and may simply have refused to expand on his alibi.
- Warren Report, p.622.
- Handwritten notes of Captain J.W. Fritz’s interview of Oswald, p.1. Fritz’s notes also contain the words, “out with Bill Shelley in front” (ibid., p.3), which have been taken to describe Oswald’s location at the time of the assassination. In fact, they almost certainly refer to his actions a few minutes later. An FBI interviewer reports that, after the assassination, Oswald “went outside and stood around for five or ten minutes with foreman BILL SHELLEY” (Warren Report, p.619).
- Jarman’s testimony: Warren Commission Hearings, vol.3, pp.201ff. Norman’s testimony: ibid., pp.189ff. For a plan of the first (ground) floor, see Warren Report, p.148 (Commission Exhibit 1061). The domino room was in the north–east corner, overlooking the loading bay; it provided a good view of anyone using the rear entrances.
- Warren Report, p.182. For a detailed account of Oswald’s movements immediately prior to the shooting, see Howard Roffmann, Presumed Guilty: How and Why the Warren Commission Framed Lee Harvey Oswald, Fairleigh Dickinson University Press, 1975, pp.177ff (available online at www.ratical.org/ratville/JFK/PG/PGchp7.html.
- Did Lee Harvey Oswald Kill President Kennedy?