John F. Kennedy, the youngest and most promising president in U.S. history, was assassinated just over 1,000 days into office. In the course of the death investigation, more than 100 people under investigation were killed, making the truth of the president's assassination even more confusing.
Young and promising president
John F. Kennedy was one of the youngest and most accomplished presidents in U.S. history and the first U.S. president to be born in the 20th century. During his tenure, he urged Congress to adopt the "New Frontier" program, advocating strong, imaginative, and effective leadership in diplomacy, resulting in an efficient, vibrant working atmosphere for the U.S. government. He himself is regarded as a leader of intelligence, vitality, charisma, and courage. Unfortunately, he was assassinated just over 1,000 days in office, who was going to take action against the president? Suddenly, people were talking about it.
A dangerous trip to Texas
On November 21, 1963, Kennedy was invited by Vice President Lyndon Johnson to Texas, the center of far-right forces in the United States, with the highest crime rate in the United States, and the city of Dallas, the city of Dallas, which has the highest crime rate in the state. The President's itinerary included Dallas. Prior to that, senators Fulbright Frye and Boggs had both advised Kennedy not to go to Dallas. However, there were rumors that Kennedy was at odds with Vice President Johnson, perhaps to ease relations with Johnson, and Kennedy decided to go.
At 11:40 a.m. on Nov. 22, Kennedy's Air Force One Presidential-specific Vosges arrived at Dallas Airport, and at 11:50 a.m., the Presidential Convoy left the airport and crossed downtown Dallas to the city's trade center, where he would deliver a speech. At 12:30, as the car drove toward the trade center, there was a sudden dull gunshot, and Kennedy's Wife Jacqueline Bull's Head noticed that her husband's head had begun to bleed heavily, and he had collapsed. Kennedy was immediately taken to the hospital, but unfortunately he died halfway through. Kennedy, the fourth president in U.S. history to be assassinated, died at the age of 46.
The murderer and the people behind him
Kennedy's death caused an uproar in the United States. People are speculating about who is going to kill the president?
On the afternoon of Kennedy's assassination, police arrested a young man named Lee Harvey Oswald.
He was accused of killing Kennedy because he was seen near the window where the bullet was now fired, and his fingerprints were found at the scene, when the president was stabbed; he had ordered an Italian-made rifle, and he had also worked in the Soviet Union. But. Oswald denied that he had killed the president.
On the morning of November 24, 1963, while the police were escorting Oswald to prison, a nightclub owner named Jack Ruby fired a shot in the chest at Oswald in full view of the public, killing him. After his arrest, Ruby denied that his killing of Oswald was related to the murder of the president, saying only that he was motivated by sympathy for the president's wife and said that he wanted to avenge the president. Ruby was jailed in March 1964, and in January 1967, Ruby died of lung cancer. At this point, the truth about Kennedy's assassination has become more obscure, and the investigation of the assassin has become more difficult.
Jack Ruby
In 1978, the U.S. House of Representatives formed a special assassination committee to investigate the incident, and initially ruled that the Kennedy assassination was a conspiracy, but this view was later overturned. Therefore, the truth about Kennedy's assassination has so far come to nowhere. The Top Secret Service of the National Archives has 51 copies of the "Investigation File on the Murder of Kennedy and Oswald", but it has never been published.