John Washburn explores the evidence that the authorities knew who Oswald was and that he was at the Beckley Street rooming house way before the official story says they knew it. In addition, they were there much earlier also.
Scott Reid explores another possibility of how Oswald got to FInland during his defection, or was it a diversion?
Tulsi Gabbard visits the National Archives, talking about the release of RFK assassination files. JFK files also mentioned, along with a look at archived items such as the Zapruder camera and the shirt Oswald was wearing. View here.
In part 2, Johnny Cairns examines the Hancock/Boylan book and its treatment of Oswald in the Marines, his discharge, his journey to Russia and his entry into Moscow. He also studies the many laws that were broken by Oswald along the way.
Researcher Johnny Cairns casts a questioning eye over the main thesis of The Oswald Puzzle, namely that Lee Oswald was a genuine leftist while he was in the Marines, in the CAP and learning Russian.
Was there even more foreshadowing of the JFK murder than we ever suspected? Did it start in the wake of the Missile Crisis? Paul Bleau thinks it did and he lays out his suspects.
Paul Abbott's forthcoming book, Death to Justice: The Shooting of Lee Harvey Oswald provides the most in-depth analysis yet on the murder of the alleged assassin, Lee Oswald. Using witness statements, evidence and visual records, that are scrutinized for the first time in this book. New light is also shed on Oswald's actual shooting, proving that the the topic, largely seen as the most open-and-shut aspect of that weekend in November of 1963, is not. Below is the foreword by Paul Bleau:
Paul Abbott's forthcoming book, Death to Justice: The Shooting of Lee Harvey Oswald provides the most in-depth analysis yet on the murder of the alleged assassin, Lee Oswald. Using witness statements, evidence and visual records, that are scrutinized for the first time in this book. New light is also shed on Oswald's actual shooting, proving that the the topic, largely seen as the most open-and-shut aspect of that weekend in November of 1963, is not. Below is an excert from the book:
In Part 3 of this review, Jim DiEugenio further exposes the numerous shortcomings of Maureen Callahan's Ask Not – in particular, that in spite of the author's assertions to the contrary, it is heavily biased against its subject.
Part 2: Callahan marches on with Mimi Alford and the Missile Crisis, Leo Damore and Chappaquiddick, and also Dominick Dunne and Mark Fuhrman.
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