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JFK Assassination Theory

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JFK Assassination Theory
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April 8, 2013
History 202
Killing Kennedy Assignment In this paper, I will discuss the controversy of the theory that Lee Harvey Oswald was the single shooter in the assassination of John Fitzgerald Kennedy (JFK). Against what Mr. O’Reilly and Mr. Dugard have said, I do not believe that Lee Harvey Oswald was the single shooter in the assassination of JFK, because the only three shots fired from his rifle would have been spaced out evenly, instead of bunched up, as witnesses testified. On November 22, 1963, Kennedy was riding in a limo through Dallas, Texas and one of the United States most tragic deaths occurred; JFK was shot in the head and neck by a sniper man named Lee Harvey Oswald. After this incident, John F. Kennedy
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If Oswald was a single gunman, it would have taken him a couple of seconds to reload his rifle. However, the general agreement of the witnesses is that they heard only one shot, followed by silence, with the second and third shots bunched together; for example, Lee Bowers, one of the witnesses, testified, "I heard three shots, one, then a slight pause, then two very close together." Also, Warren W. Taylor, a Secret Service agent, said, "As a matter of course, I opened the door and prepared to get out of the car. In the instant that my left foot touched the ground, I heard two more bangs and realized that they must be gun shots." Lastly, when Miss Willis, a witness, was asked if she heard any shots, she testified, "Yes; I heard one. Then there was a little bit of time, and then there were two real fast bullets together. When the first one hit, well, the President turned from waving to the people, and he grabbed his throat, and he kind of slumped forward, and then I couldn't tell where the second shot went." Thus, it would have been impossible for one gunman to fire a shot with the rifle, reload, fire again, and fire again in a very short amount of time in order to make the shots sound close

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