Description
‘The Innocence of Oswald-60+ Years of Lies, Deception & Deceit in the Murders of President John F. Kennedy & Officer J.D. Tippit.’ This book proves how the U.S. Government, Lyndon B. Johnson, The Secret Service, FBI, CIA, Mafia Connections and Texas Oil arranged, financed, implemented the assassination and cover-up of our nations 35th President, John Fitzgerald Kennedy.
Includes FBI documents signed by J. Edgar Hoover on 11/23/63 stating the FBI (and Dallas Police) had no fingerprints on the weapons and shell casings Oswald was to have ‘allegedly’ used to assassinate President Kennedy and Officer J.D. Tippit.
Includes Naval Intelligence documents before and after the assassination of President Kennedy to a self-admitted assassin describing in great detail of the upcoming events of 11/22/63 and the following cover-up.
Includes the document of Jack Ruby admitting to Dallas County Police (while in Dallas County Records Building/Asst. District Attorney Office) on 11/21/63, ‘You probably don’t know me now, but you will.’
Book contains 76 color photographs/documents and 64 Black and White.
admin-jfk –
Title says it all! This is a must read if you are interested in the Kennedy assassination, as well as the Tippit murder. The author provides many facts and details and supports them with many photos (many in color), along with supporting documents. Mr. Fannin provides so much information set out that reveal many missing links to connect those that can’t help but be involved in various ways. He includes many who had mysterious deaths after the assassination and potential shooters and their different locations. The book provides positive support of Oswald’s innocence and his involvement with the CIA and the FBI and being used as the “patsy'” he said he was when he was arrested. Again, this is definitely a must read to explain many theories and questions raised regarding the Kennedy assassination.
John W. Thompson
admin-jfk –
I could not put this book down. I usually read two or three books at a time, picking them up and putting them down as the mood strikes me, but this book I read straight through from the moment I picked it up.
The Innocence of Oswald isn’t your typical 800 page JFK assassination tome laying out every last detail of political backstory. Usually those books are slogs and only end up attempting to explain that, despite all the intrigue, Oswald was a lone nut who pulled off this (literal) coup on his own. I have long been unconvinced by that narrative–probably since I was old enough to understand that Oswald said “I’m a patsy,” and soon after was himself assassinated while in police custody–but the truth of what exactly did happen has remained to me uncertain. I have boiled it down to the likelihood that either the CIA did it or LBJ did it or both.
Fannin leans to the Johnson explanation and provides some compelling evidence for that position, particularly an accounting of LBJ’s bizarre demand that he be sworn in on Air Force One as it was about to fly JFK’s body to DC, insisting Jackie leave her husband’s casket and stand at the new president’s side just two hours after she scrambled to pick up the pieces of JFK’s brain as he was assassinated beside her.
Fannin’s conclusions were fascinating and well-supported, but they weren’t what kept me riveted to the book. What kept me turning page after page was the book’s cataloging of the copious evidence that weighs against the notion that Oswald was a lone assassin. Fannin’s presentation of the evidence was not bogged down by every nuance of the events of the day, nor did the author bury the evidence among assumptions and speculation that can obscure the facts in many of the bulkier treatments of the subject.
‘The Innocence of Oswald’ is an uncensored, scrupulously researched collection of convincing evidence against the fatally flawed mainstream narrative of an event that marked the dawning of a new age in government power and media collusion. —Monica Perez, Host of ‘The Monica Perez Show’ on WSB Radio, Atlanta, GA
admin-jfk –
Well researched and documented by Gary Fannin, a man of integrity in the search for truth in the assassination of President John Kennedy and Officer J.D. Tippit. This book is a must read for people who are just beginning to question the “Official Report,” or the seasoned researcher. —Beverly Oliver, eyewitness to JFK assassination and author of “Nightmare in Dallas.”
admin-jfk –
Using a wide variety of sources, Gary Fannin has put together a good overview of the JFK assassination. The graphics are excellent and the passion and enthusiasm of the author shines on every page. —Vince Palamara, author of Survivor’s Guilt & JFK: From Parkland to Bethesda
admin-jfk –
Excellent research and documents clearly prove Oswald’s innocence in the events of Nov. 22, 1963 and how U.S. Intelligence, ‘played Oswald as a pawn’ from 1957-1963 by Naval Intelligence, the CIA, the FBI, and ultimately Oswald’s role of ‘patsy’ by Lyndon B. Johnson. ‘THE INNOCENCE OF OSWALD’ clearly defines how U.S. Intelligence Agencies had connections to Lee Harvey Oswald years before the assassination of the 35th President and suppressed this information to the U.S. Secret Service, Dallas Police Department, and ultimately the Warren Commission Report.—Roger Stone, author of “The Man Who Killed Kennedy: The Case Against LBJ”
admin-jfk –
The first rule of any political assassination is “silence the assassin,” author Gary Fannin’s book is full of 1st person witness accounts and historical photos. For anyone uncertain about the suspicions that surround the silencing of Lee Harvey Oswald by known under world connection Jack Ruby, this book is a winner. —Brent Holland, author of “JFK Assassination from the Oval Office to Dealey Plaza” and Host of Night Fright Show.
admin-jfk –
newsgirl
5.0 out of 5 stars Convincing without exagerration
This book epitomizes what journalism is supposed to be and, unfortunately, rarely is, especially with regard to the killing of President Kennedy and the aftermath.
I have read many books about the assassination and Oswald in the last 25 years. “The Innocence of Oswald” is one of the best. It lays out all the known facts and possibilities without speculation and thus shows the impossibility of Oswald being THE shooter. Nor is it possible that he killed Officer Tippit.
Despite its just-the-facts approach, “The Innocence of Oswald” is a riveting read that is difficult to put down.
I commend Gary Fannin for his tireless efforts in a culture where the power elite and its media allies have sought to undermine those seeking the truth by labeling them “conspiracy theorists” or “nuts.”
I look forward to more of his research.