Lee Harvey Oswald and two policemen, after his arrest. Photo: National Archives
(Note: On December 15, 2021, almost 1,500 previously classified documents related to the 1963 assassination of President John F. Kennedy were released. However, JFK researchers are disappointed because the documents are for the most part uninformative. This leaves about 10,000 documents either partially redacted or withheld entirely, and not to be seen until at least next December.)
With no gunpowder residue on his face and with no evidence that he fired a rifle at 12:30 p.m. on November 22, 1963, did Lee Harvey Oswald speak the truth?
“I’m just a patsy,” he said.
Seeking political cover instead of facts, the Warren Commission’s conclusion — that acting alone, Oswald assassinated President John F. Kennedy — was dead wrong. Even as the commission insisted it was right, not all its members agreed. On the phone with his pal, President Lyndon Johnson, commission member and Georgia Sen. Richard Russell said, “I don’t believe it,” and LBJ replied, “I don’t either.”
Promulgated by Arlen Spector, the commission’s assistant counsel, his “single-bullet theory” — on which the commission’s conclusion rested — was pure whimsy. Reinforced by medical and ballistic evidence, frame-by-frame analysis of Abraham Zapruder’s documentary film puts to rest the single-bullet flimflam and repudiates the commission’s conclusion that Oswald was a lone assassin.
So, if not Oswald by himself, we’re obliged to consider those ample reports of gunfire and gun smoke from behind the wooden fence on the so-called Grassy Knoll. Based on a detailed acoustical analysis, the House Select Committee on Assassinations in 1976 concluded it was likely that Kennedy was shot in the head by a rifleman firing from the Grassy Knoll and that at least two gunmen were involved with his killing. The Justice Department, however, punted; it failed to open another investigation.
Before his assassination in Dallas, Kennedy appeared to be moving to take the United States out of Vietnam, to resolve the impasse over Cuba, and to reduce the stockpile of nuclear weapons. He was also in secret communication with the Soviet Union’s Premier Nikita Khrushchev on how to end the Cold War.
Over-abundant theories about who shot Kennedy are a confusing collection of rabbit holes that variously focus on a shadowy group in New Orleans, the Central Intelligence Agency, a nebulous “deep-state” within the U.S. government, the military-industrial complex, the U.S. Secret Service, right-wing Cubans, the Mafia, LBJ, George H.W. Bush, Castro’s government, the Soviets, the Federal Reserve, and the Israelis.
In 2017, a Washington Post reporter observed that “42 groups, 82 assassins, and 214 people” have been named over the years as being involved in the assassination.
Nothing has been resolved.
Until the American people are offered a satisfactory explanation of how Jack Kennedy was killed and by whom, festering suspicions will cloud our national history. To put this into perspective, there remain unresolved theories and arguments over Abraham Lincoln’s assassination.
As a community organizer, journalist, administrator, project planner/manager, and consultant, Gren Whitman has led neighborhood, umbrella, public interest, and political committees and groups, and worked for civil rights and anti-war organizations.
Title image: Pond at Pickering Creek Audubon Center, Talbot Co. Photo: Jan Plotczyk