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November 22, 1963
William Morrow
May 2006
240 pages ISBN: 0060721545 Hardcover
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Non-Fiction Political | Historical
On November 22, 1963, a murder was committed in
Dallas, Texas. The victim happened to be the president of
the United States. More than forty years later, the case
remains unsolved. Nearly 80 percent of the American people don't believe
that John F. Kennedy was killed by a lone gunman, and the
House Assassinations Committee has found that the president
was "assassinated as the result of a conspiracy." Yet the
conspirators have never been identified or brought to
justice. Until now. And once you read this book, you'll know who killed JFK. A Simple Act of Murder is the investigation that this
case should have had from the beginning. America's most
famous detective, Mark Fuhrman -- who has cracked some of
the best-known and most puzzling crimes in American history
-- cuts through the myths and misinformation to focus on the
hard evidence. He examines the ballistics and medical
records, scrutinizes photographs from the crime scene and
the famous Zapruder film, and weighs the testimony of
hundreds of witnesses. Filled with vivid photos, informative diagrams, and original
drawings by Fuhrman himself that show the evidence in a new
light and make complex forensic matters clear and easily
understood, this book is the visual record of the JFK
assassination. In this gripping and highly personal account, Fuhrman
unveils a major clue that had been ignored for forty years
-- a breakthrough that will change the debate over the
assassination. Overturning accepted notions about the way
the murder occurred, A Simple Act of Murder answers many
questions that have plagued the American people ever since
that fateful day in Dallas: * Was Lee Harvey Oswald the lone gunman, or was there a
conspiracy?
* Could the Magic Bullet have done everything the Warren
Commission claimed it did?
* What evidence was planted, suppressed, or destroyed?
* What crucial piece of evidence was missed by all the
government investigations, and even the independent
researchers?
* And, finally, who killed JFK? The answers may surprise you.
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