Definitive Proof: The Secret Service Murder of President John Fitzgerald Kennedy
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Average customer review:Product Description
President John Kennedy was killed by a head shot fired at close range with a hand gun, not a rifle as concluded by the Warren Commission. The fatal head shot entered the president's right temple and traveled rearward into his brain. Recently digitally-enhanced photographic evidence confirms this conclusion and fits with the available medical, eyewitness and ballistics evidence. For the first time, every piece of the puzzle fits together logically! President Kennedy was killed by a federal agent. Government officials orchestrated a cover-up including destruction of evidence and the lie of the Warren Report. This books sets the record straight.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #532138 in Books
- Published on: 2006-11-14
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Paperback
- 120 pages
Customer Reviews
This book truly solves who killed JFK
I read Robertson's book and reviewed the DVD he wrote about. I must admit that I was very skeptical at first, but after reviewing everything, including the DVD multiple times, I saw it! Greer did kill JFK! As Robertson says in his book and as he shows in his photos, the gun is not near Kellerman's head as some have wrongly suggested, but to Kellerman's left and lower than his head. Be sure to read footnote 22 and the photos at the end of Chapter III. Look for the arrow pointing to the gun -- it's not pointing at Kellerman's head but between Kellerman and Greer! It's all there for anyone with eyes and an open mind!
Five stars *****
Alton Markland
This book presents credible and compelling evidence the fatal head shot suffered by
President Kennedy was fired by a Secret Service agent sitting in front of the president.
The evidence the author presents is this: (1) a radiation oncologist of established repute,
Dr. David Mantik, concluded that JFK's X-rays demonstrated that the head shot was fired
from in front of JFK into his right front temple; (2) Dr. Mantik further concluded the
head shot could not have fired from either the Texas School Book Depository or the
grassy knoll; (4) Dr. Mantik's conclusions are backed up by ballistic experts; (5)
forensics expert Dr. Charles Wilber concluded that the head wound "suggested a high
velocity hand gun fired at close range;" (5) only Secret Service agents in Dallas were
both seated in front of JFK at close range and had hand guns; (6) Secret Service Agent
Clint Hill testified that the head shot sounded like someone had shot a "revolver into a
hard object"; (7) several eyewitnesses testified that they smelled gunpowder at street
level where JFK had been killed moments after his killing (and the odor of gunpowder
doesn't travel very fast); and (8) eyewitness Austin Miller later testified that he thought
that the shots fired at JFK had come from "right there in the car,' referring to JFK's limo
It all adds up: the Secret Service fired the head shot at JFK. Then, if you view the
"medium frames" version of the DVD that Dan Robertson discusses in the book, particularly
frames 302-313, you see the Secret Service agent Robertson identifies as William Greer
Aim with a gun-like object in his left hand and you see JFK's head exploding at frame
313. If you want to know what really happened to JFK, you need to read the book.
Lots of good information, sincere intent...wrong conclusion
I commend Dan Robertson for a well written and researched book. There is a lot of good information on the Secret Service and their role, innocent and otherwise, on 11/22/63 during the JFK assassination, as well as before and after (Robertson makes good use of my material, as well as doing some original research, too). There is no doubt: Robertson's intent was sincere; he's no loony but a successful, intelligent lawyer. That said, the ultimate conclusion of the book, that Secret Service driver William R. Greer shot JFK, is simply not supported by any credible evidence (and the allegation is hardly a new---and unknown---one: Fred Newcomb, Perry Adams, Lars Hansen, and William Milton Cooper, among others, espoused this decades ago, and many 'common folk' are much aware of this fringe theory). Still, this book is a worthwhile addition to the collection (and for anyone interested in the Secret Service and JFK).




