

Sean Hannity of Fox news interviewed Democratic presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., the nephew of former President John F. Kennedy, where he shares his take on the alleged conspiracies surrounding the CIA’s role in the JFK assassination.
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. is a brave man for even still participating in the political arena.
Not only did he lose his father, Robert F. Kennedy, Sr., in 1968 after he was shot by Sirhan Sirhan at the Ambassador Hotel in Los Angeles, CA, but he lost his uncle to an assassination just five years prior.
This man has balls of steel.
RFK, Jr. shares that there are 5,000 documents still awaiting to be released surrounding the details of JFK’s assassination, after having been approved releasing 10 years ago. Why are they holding on to these 5,000 documents, hmm? Who is there still left to protect?
Former President Donald Trump promised to release those documents upon becoming president, and even President Joe Biden made the same promise, yet the CIA continues to withhold the information.
What could they be wanting to hide even after 60 years has gone by?
Former Secret Service agent, Paul Landis, now 88, was assigned to the security detail of first lady Jacqueline Kennedy back in 1963 and happened to be traveling with the motorcade when JFK was assassinated through downtown Dallas.
People held an interview with Landis, where he recounts the events that unfolded that day. He remembers hearing one gunshot as they completed the hairpin turn and were straightening out the cars. He scanned the area but couldn’t find anything.
“I had just finished scanning the overpass and ahead of the car, and I heard this second shot, and still no reaction from President Kennedy,” Landis recalls. “I couldn’t see anything else in the limo. It still appeared that everything was okay.”
Then, the third shot rang out. Landis describes how one agent immediately rushed to Kennedy’s side before the motorcade raced to Parkland Memorial Hospital.
“It was like a flash of white, and then the air just filled with a cloud of blood and brain, flesh, bone matter — and I ducked so I wouldn’t get splattered as we drove through it,” he says.
Landis recalls running to the limo the president was escorted in, taking in the bloody scene. He noticed two bullet fragments nestled in a pool of blood, picked them up and then placing them back where he found them.
That’s when Landis says he noticed a fully intact bullet “sitting on the back seat ledge, where the cushion meets the metal on the car.”
“I picked that up,” he says. “I looked at it and I started to put it back. I didn’t see anybody in the vicinity, I was wondering where all the agents were. And they all seemed to be over looking for the president or to help remove the president. So I put the bullet in my pocket.”
It was “a quick decision,” Landis says, one he debated “just for a second,” deciding that he ultimately “didn’t want that bullet to disappear.”
Amidst all the chaos in the hospital, the trauma room, and eventually the hospital room, Landis continued to observe and fumble with the bullet in his pocket.
“I took it out and I set it by the president’s left foot, and it was like a white cotton blanket on the table, and the bullet started to roll off the table, and I reached out and grabbed it, and there was a little wrinkle in the blanket. So I put the bullet so that it wouldn’t roll off. It stopped in that blanket.”
Amid the confusion and chaos, Landis says, “I figured this was the place the bullet it needed to be. They would find it. And I felt a great relief that I had saved an important piece of evidence.”
Landis wrote down what he could remember of the incidents and mentally prepared himself for when the Warren Commission, which is a larger investigation, would question him. They never did.
Many years pass and Landis stumbled upon a book called Six Seconds in Dallas which he read in 2014 and discovered that several details didn’t align with what he recounted.
For instance, the book stated that the bullet was found on the gurney of Texas Gov. John Connally who survived the shooting but endured serious injuries. The book displayed a picture of the bullet which matched the exact bullet Landis placed on JFK’s stretcher.
After swirling these details around in his mind for several more years, Landis finally decided to come forward with his story 60 years after the assassination.
The most popular story surrounding these details affixes on former U.S. Marine Lee Harvey Oswald being the lone gunman, having positioned himself on the sixth floor of the Texas School Book Depository.
Well, Steve Gillon, a historian who has studied the JFK assassination in great detail, finds that the Warren Commission and the incidents that Landis recounts are in contradiction of one another.
“[Landis’] account and the Warren Commission can’t both be right,” Gillon says. “So if what he remembers is true, then the Warren Commission is wrong … It all revolves around the magic bullet. “
The Warren Commission reported that there were a total of three bullets fired, where the first bullet missed its target, having thought to have hit a sign nearby due to the scattered fragments they discovered at the scene.
The second bullet aligns with the so-called “magic bullet” theory, where somehow this single bullet shot Kennedy in the back and came out his throat, then following through to Gov. Connally, breaking one of his ribs before exiting his body, then re-entering his body through his wrist and lastly hitting his thigh.
That’s a powerful freaking bullet.
“According to the Warren Commission, that [magic] bullet was found on a gurney by a hospital employee in the hallway,” Gillon notes. “And no one is certain what gurney it was and whether it was the one Connally came in or not. That was the speculation.”
The Warren Commission is trying to maintain the link between the bullet that ended with Connally must have stayed with Connally.
Yet, Landis remembers that this fully intact bullet had hardly any blood on it and was settled behind where the first lady was seated.
It wasn’t until the third bullet that JFK was fatally shot through his head.
That second bullet, Gillon believes, couldn’t have been found by Landis on the ledge of Kennedy’s limo, behind where the first lady was sitting, as he recounts in his book. “It makes absolutely no sense if it’s behind Jackie because how did it get behind her without hitting her?” he questions.
All of these details, in consideration with the fact that Oswald was shooting from the sixth floor, leave no other explanation than the theory of a potential second shooter.
Gillon does note the oddity surrounding the fact that Landis’s presence isn’t recalled in any of the Secret Service testimonies, yet Landis was close enough to place the bullet at the end of JFK’s stretcher. Therefore, Gillon worries that some details and memories may be blurred after so much time has passed.
Nonetheless, Landis says he feels great relief after finally sharing his perspective of the tragic events that unfolded that day.
Landis will be releasing his memoir soon, called, “The Final Witness: A Kennedy Secret Service Agent Breaks His Silence After 60 Years.”
2 Comments
News flash: spooks don’t document illegal activities. The only sources are the participants, and it is likely that they are all dead. I wonder if JFK was pulling out of Viet Nam and that was the motivation to assassinate him. Wars are hugely profitable for some but not for the peons who have to fight them. Organized crime was also pissed at him for not rescuing Cuba so they could profit from gambling and prostitution there. I doubt that we will ever know the truth. Then there is LBJ.
No blood on an intact bullet (that has traveled through a person) is not unsurprising. Myth Busters tested a myth of a woman getting pregnant during the Civil War because a musket ball was shot, traveled through a man’s… ” lower waist”, and then proceeded onward to strike a woman in her… “lower waist”. The musket ball in the test had very little to no biological material on it (myth busted). And musket balls were larger and slower than the 6.5mm bullet used in the Carcano rifle Oswald used.