You mean like Vincent Bugliosi before he passed away this year?
Read his book - you will have a hard time refuting him.
I've stood on the Grassy Knoll and it is at a right angle to the final shot seen on the Zapruder film - no way someone shot from behind that picket fence for the final shot.
I've stood on the Sixth floor at the sniper's perch and the shot lines up for a very easy shot to make for a qualified marine like Oswald. Either that, or someone standing right in front of the Limo on the triple underpass - which everyone would have seen.
Face it - Oswald, acting alone, killed Kennedy.
Originally Posted by friendly fred
some of what you posted lines up with some of what i posted, i do recall that the head shot could have come of the sixth floor. was not sure about the grassy knoll, i'll take your word that it doesn't line up to the head shot. been too many years since i've watched a detailed review of the Zapurder film and there have been many CGI recreations based on it.
it is certainly possible for Oswald from that location to make both shots. and he certainly had the training from the Marines to do it. experts have used the same crappy Italian military rifle to prove the known number of shots could have been made by a long shooter in the time frame shown in the film by Zaparuder.
so why would Oswald claim he was a patsy? if he acted alone why not yell "Communism Forever!" or some like that? strange choice of words and for whatever reason he said it, it does give rise to others possibly being involved.
then there is Ruby, who conveniently silenced Oswald and did claim later he regretted it. was it the truth or disinformation? we'll never know from Rudy as he never said anymore on the matter before he died.
and then there is Bugliosi, who on the one hand claims JFK's assassination was a lone shooter, Oswald then claims RFK's assassination was a conspiracy. Hmmm.
it is possible he's right on both counts. part of the ongoing conspiracy theory about JFK is that many can't accept that a lone gunman could do such a thing. it's possible many
need to believe it was a conspiracy because accepting that Oswald acting alone is such a shocking blow to the nation.
JFK assassination
In 1986, Bugliosi played the part of prosecutor in an unscripted 21-hour mock television trial of
Lee Harvey Oswald. His legal opponent, representing Oswald, was the well-known criminal defense attorney
Gerry Spence.
London Weekend Television sponsored the mock trial, which followed
Texas criminal trial procedure. It also included a former Texas judge and a jury of U.S. citizens from the
Dallas area which reviewed hundreds of exhibits and listened to witnesses who testified about the assassination. The jury found Oswald guilty. Spence remarked, "No other lawyer in America could have done what Vince did in this case."
[9]
The program required extensive preparation by Bugliosi and inspired him to later write a comprehensive book on the subject of the assassination. His 1,612-page book (with a
CD-ROM containing an additional 958 pages of endnotes and 170 pages of source notes),
Reclaiming History: The Assassination of President John F. Kennedy, was published in May 2007. His book examined the
JFK assassination in detail and drew on a variety of sources; his findings were in line with those of the
Warren Report, which concluded that
Lee Harvey Oswald acted alone in the assassination of the 35th President. He called
Reclaiming History his
"magnum opus."[10] The book won the 2008
Edgar Award for Best Fact Crime.
[11] A portion of the book was re-published in 2008 as
Four Days in November: The Assassination of President John F. Kennedy, which became the basis of the 2013 film
Parkland.
The title of
Reclaiming History derived from Bugliosi's belief that the history of the Kennedy assassination has been hijacked by
conspiracy theories, the popularity of which, he asserted, has a pernicious and ongoing effect on American thought:
Unless this fraud is finally exposed, the word believe will be forgotten by future generations and John F. Kennedy will have unquestionably become the victim of a conspiracy. Belief will have become unchallenged fact, and the faith of the American people in their institutions further eroded. If that is allowed to happen, Lee Harvey Oswald, a man who hated his country and everything for which it stands, will have triumphed even beyond his intent on that fateful day in November.
— Vincent Bugliosi, Reclaiming History, p.1011.
RFK assassination
Bugliosi is on record for believing that Senator
Robert Kennedy was the victim of a
conspiracy. He said the following during a civil trial of the
RFK assassination:
We are talking about a conspiracy to commit murder ... a conspiracy the prodigious dimensions of which would make Watergate look like a one-roach marijuana case.[12]