Avsnitt
-
In this week's episode we look at if the Dallas Police really tried to protect Lee Harvey Oswald while he was in custody at the Dallas Police Department. While was his transfer from one jail to the next not done at night in secrecy? And was FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover upset with the way the Dallas Police handled Oswald's security?
-
Saknas det avsnitt?
-
The story presented here takes place in the Dallas jail, 34 hours after the assassination of President John F. Kennedy. The facts have been called by G. Robert Blakey, Chief Counsel for the House Select Committee on Assassinations, "real," "substantiated," "very troublesome," and "deeply disturbing." He went on to say that, while this is only a small part of the large mystery of the Kennedy assassination, it raises questions that remain "unanswered," makes inferences which are "ultimately inconclusive," and is therefore an "unanswerable mystery."
-
In this week's episode of the End of Innocence- The JFK Assassination, we look at Lee Harvey Oswald's arrest in the Texas Theatre. How does the official story of what happened differ from what witnesses who were there that day say happened? And were there two Oswald's in the theatre that day and was Jack Ruby in the theatre?
-
When 20-year-old Thomas Matthew Crooks shot at former-President Donald Trump on July 13, the American public was ready with conspiracy theories explaining how and why he did it. And that shouldn’t come as a shock. Most Americans think President John F Kennedy was assassinated as part of a conspiracy, either by the US Government, Cubans, or the Mafia. They’re primed to believe their government is keeping secrets from them—because it is.
-
In this week's episode we are going to listen to Part 2 of Penn Jones' 1966 interview on KPFA radio. This is a very rare and important interview from one of the best JFK assassination researchers of our time. In this interview he talks a lot about Jack Ruby's connections to the Dallas Police and more about some mysterious deaths that happened to researchers and witnesses after the assassination.
-
In this week's episode, we will listen to a very rare 1966 interview with Penn Jones Jr. about his book "Forgive My Grief." Penn had some significant things to say in this interview and the fact that he uncovered some of the things he did so early into the investigation speaks to what a great researcher he was. This is a very important interview with an introduction by author and researcher James Di Eugenio.
-
Over the past several episodes, we have been looking at heroes in the JFK assassination research community. This week I wanted to share with you about my research hero. He is said to be the grandfather of the JFK assassination researchers. His name is Penn Jones Jr, and his story is one that needs to be told.
-
In this week's episode, we take our last look at Mark Lane's 1967 documentary, "Rush to Judgement." We will hear from a witness who saw the J.D. Tippit shooting and from several witnesses who were in Dealey Plaza when the President was murdered. We will also hear from the woman who took the most famous picture of the President at the exact moment of the fatal headshot.
-
In this episode, we will hear from witnesses to the assassination interviewed by author and attorney Mark Lane for his 1967 documentary, "Rush to Judgement." These were first-hand, boots-on-the-ground witnesses who saw the assassination of Kennedy happen before their own two eyes. Their account of what happened that day will make you doubt what the government tells us about the killing of the President.
-
In this week's episode, we continue to look at heroes of the JFK assassination research community. This week we hear from one of the earliest challengers of the Warren Commision's report on the assassination. Mark Lane was a relentless researcher and his early criticism of the Warren Report helped pave the way for researchers like myself today.
-
On May 13, 2024 the JFK research community lost one of its heroes. Dr. Cyril Wecht has been a fighter for the truth about the Kennedy assassination for 60 years but his fight ended last week. In this week's episode, we pay tribute to Dr. Wecht and I thank him for the time he spent with me over the years and the inspiration he was in my own search for the truth about the assassination.
- Visa fler