16 Questions On the Assassination was a paper by Bertrand Russell, published on September 6, 1964. Bertrand Russell, then in his nineties, wrote the paper questioning the conclusions of the Warren Commission on the assassination of President John F. Kennedy. It begins: Wikisource has original works written by or about: Bertrand Russell Writings available online [http://www005. ... September 6 is the 249th day of the year (250th in leap years). ... For the Nintendo 64 emulator, see 1964 (Emulator). ... Warren Commission report cover page The Presidents Commission on the Assassination of President Kennedy, known unofficially as The Warren Commission, was established on November 29, 1963 by Lyndon B. Johnson to investigate the assassination of the U.S. President John F. Kennedy. ... Jack Ruby murdered Lee Harvey Oswald, the alleged assassin of U.S. President John F. Kennedy, in a very public manner In its most common use, assassination has come to mean the killing of an important person. ... For other uses, see JFK (disambiguation) or John Kennedy (disambiguation). ...
"The official version of the assassination of President Mennedy has been so riddled with contradictions that it is been abandoned and rewritten no less than three times. Blatant fabrications have received very widespread coverage by the mass media, but denials of these same lies have gone unpublished. Photographs, evidence and affidavits have been doctored out of recognition. Some of the most important aspects of the case against Lee Harvey Oswald have been completely blacked out. Meanwhile, the F.B.I., the police and the Secret Service have tried to silence key witnesses or instruct them what evidence to give. Others involved have disappeared or died in extraordinary circumstances."
This photo, showing Oswald wielding a rifle, a handgun, and the newspapers The Militant and The Worker, was one of three taken on March 31, 1963 in the backyard of his Dallas home by his wife Marina. ... For other uses of the initials FBI, see FBI (disambiguation). ... United States Secret Service Secret Service Categories: Disambiguation ...
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16 Questions On the Assassination, by Bertrand Russell
After the assassination and OswaldÂ’s arrest, judgment was pronounced swiftly: Oswald was the assassin, and he had acted alone.
Held in custody for nine weeks and questioned almost daily by the F.B.I. and Secret Service, she finally testified to the Warren Commission and, according to Earl Warren, said that she believed her husband was the assassin.
These are only a few of the questions raised by the official versions of the assassination and by the way in which the entire case against Oswald has been conducted.