Breach of Trust: How the Warren Commission Failed the Nation and why

Couverture
University Press of Kansas, 2005 - 478 pages
That recent appraisal reflects a growing consensus that the Warren Commission largely failed in its duty to our nation. Echoing that sentiment, the Gallup organization has reported that 75 percent of Americans polled do not believe the Commission's major conclusion that Lee Harvey Oswald was the lone assassin. Gerald McKnight now gives profound substance to that view in the most meticulous and devastating dissection of the Commission's work to date. The Warren Commission produced 26 volumes of hearings and exhibits, more than 17,000 pages of testimony, and a 912-page report. Surely a definitive effort. Not at all, McKnight argues. The Warren Report itself, he contends, was little more than the capstone to a deceptive and shoddily improvised exercise in public relations designed to prove that Oswald had acted alone. McKnight argues that the Commission's own documents and collected testimony ...

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Table des matières

the Government
60
The Warren Commission Behind Closed
89
The Warren Commission Confronts
108
The Warren Commissions Smoking Guns
128
The JFK Autopsy
153
Birth of the SingleBullet Fabrication
181
Politics of the SingleBullet Fabrication
213
FBI Blunders and CoverUps in the
247
Senator Russell Dissents
282
Was Oswald a Government Agent?
298
JFK Cuba and the Castro Problem
330
Conclusion
354
A Brief Chronology and Summary of
369
Selected Bibliography
453
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À propos de l'auteur (2005)

Gerald D. McKnight is professor emeritus of history at Hood College in Frederick, Maryland.

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