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Government’s ‘Magic Bullet’ Theory Debunked: Witness Unravels JFK Assassination Mystery

A key witness to the assassination of President John F. Kennedy has come forward after 60 years. This surprising twist in the JFK assassination story challenges a crucial government narrative that has been accepted as fact for decades.

Paul Landis, an 88-year-old former Secret Service agent who was assigned to First Lady Jackie Kennedy’s protective detail on that fateful day in Dallas, November 22, 1963, recently gave an exclusive interview to The New York Times.

His revelations have raised serious doubts about the Warren Commission’s assertion, which has been a cornerstone of the official explanation of JFK’s death.

The Warren Commission put forth the theory that a single bullet, often known as the “magic bullet,” hit both President Kennedy and Texas Governor John B. Connally Jr., who was seated next to Kennedy.

This theory has been met with skepticism by many due to its apparent disregard for common sense and physics.

However, Landis has now disputed this narrative. He claims that he was the one who found the so-called “magic bullet” at the chaotic crime scene following the shooting.

According to Landis, there was nothing “magical” about the bullet. He asserts that it hit Kennedy in the back but didn’t have enough power and popped back out before the President’s body was removed from the limousine.

Contrary to the Warren Commission’s claim, Landis insists that the bullet never touched Connally.

This revelation not only debunks the “magic bullet” theory but also raises the possibility of a second shooter. Landis, who had always believed that Lee Harvey Oswald acted alone, admitted that he is no longer certain.

His uncertainty opens up the possibility of a second shooter, a theory that has been dismissed by the official narrative for decades.

James Robenalt, a Cleveland-based lawyer and author of four books on American history, agrees with Landis’s revelations. He stated that if Landis’s claims are accurate, it would mean that the central idea of the Warren Report, the single-bullet theory, is incorrect.

This could potentially reexamine the question of a second shooter or more.

Robert F. Kennedy Jr., nephew of the 35th president and Democratic presidential candidate, also responded to these new revelations. He declared the magic bullet theory “dead” and challenged the notion that JFK was killed by a lone individual.

He also criticized the Warren Commission, which was overseen by former CIA Director Allen Dulles, who had been fired by his uncle.

These recent revelations even prompted the New York Times, one of the main supporters of the Warren Report, to acknowledge its absurdity.

This article appeared in Conservative Cardinal and has been published here with permission.

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Written by Western Reader

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