New Discoveries on Kennedy Murder

In about 55 years after John Kennedy's murder, endless consistent theories have come out to explain how, in reality, the U.S. President was shot, beginning with the green rolling in his arms. Despite Lee Harvey Oswald's arrest, which further evidence linked Kennedy's wound to the type of gun Oswald [...]
In about 55 years after John Kennedy's murder, endless consistent theories have come out to explain how, in reality, the U.S. President was shot, beginning with the green rolling in his arms.
Despite Lee Harvey Oswald's arrest, which the subsequent evidence linked Kennedy's wound to the type of gun Oswald owned, skeptics have proposed there was another shooter standing on the green hill near the road that Kennedy was crossing. But now a new study can put an end to this debate.
New estimates, based on the film footage recorded at the moment of the assassination, indicate that the mysterious movement of the president's head after being shot, a vital detail to the theory on green hill, has simply been an effect of setback.
The detailed investigation shows that the impact of fatal lead on the head has immediately brought a return to the inertia and a turning of the head. Adding further evidence that Kennedy was shot in the back, as did the official autopsy at the time.














