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Warren Commission

The Warren Commission was established to investigate the assassination of the US president John F. Kennedy on November 29, 1963. The commission took its name from its chairman, Chief Justice Earl Warren.

The others members were:

In the years following its release, the Warren Commission's findings came under much criticism for some of its methods and conclusions, in particular its allowing of the destruction of crucial evidence by the law enforcement authorities and intelligence agencies without any adverse comment. Comments were apparently made on this behind closed doors, but this did not reach the published report.

The report concluded that Lee Harvey Oswald, acting alone, was responsible for the assassination of Kennedy. This conclusion has been challenged on many grounds, not least of which being the "Magic Bullet Theory" whereby one bullet traveled through Kennedy and Connolay's torso, bounced off Connolay's wrist, and wound up embedded a few milimetres into his thigh, falling out as he lay in a stretcher on the way to the hospital, relatively intact.

Quite how it came to be there, or if indeed it ever originated from the alleged murder weapon has been the subject of much debate.

Several individual pieces of the Commission's findings have been called into question or discredited since its completion. A subsequent Congressional hearing into the assassination (the House Select Committee on Assassinations) ultimately suspected a larger conspiracy. Other independent investigators and authors have also provided research into elements of the Commission's report, and are ongoing.

As specific conclusions relating to who committed the assassination are proven or disproven, the Warren Commission has other descriptive evidence and causation for the event, such as grossly insufficient security provided by the Secret Service to protect the president. These specific findings prompted the Secret Service to make numerous modifications to their security procedures.

The Warren Commission was a several hundred page document, and its conclusions about who killed Kennedy did not comprise the entire report. If in future part or all of its conclusions about Kennedy's assassin or assassins is reversed with conclusive scientific evidence, it is important to note that the report has a wider span than simply its conclusions about Kennedy's assassin.

Studies adding credence to, as well as those discrediting the Warren Commission report exist, and research to both ends is ongoing.

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Referenced By

1963 | 27 September | 27th September | 29 November | 29th November | 9-11 Commission | 9/11 Commission | Abraham Zapruder | Alek J. Hidell | Allen Dulles | Allen W. Dulles | Allen Welsh Dulles | Arlen Specter | As of November 2003 | Earl Warren | Gerald Ford | Gerald R. Ford | Gerald Rudolph Ford | Hale Boggs | History of the United States (1945-1964) | House Select Committee on Assassinations | Jack Kennedy | John F. Kennedy | John F. Kennedy Assassination | John F Kennedy | John Fitzgerald Kennedy | John J. McCloy | Kennedy administration | Kennedy assassination | Lee Harvey Oswald | Lee Oswald | Leslie Lynch King, Jr. | Lone Nut Theory | Lone gunman theory | Magic Bullet Theory | Main Page/Temp5 | National Commission on Terrorist Attacks Upon the United States | November 2003 | November 29 | November 29th | September 27 | September 27th | Single bullet theory | The Men Who Killed Kennedy | Umbrella Man | Zapruder Film

 

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This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Warren Commission".

 

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