Why John F. Kennedy's Doctors Believe Lee Harvey Oswald Didn't Act Alone

The official version of events as told by the Warren Commission report framed the shooting as follows: Lone gunman Lee Harvey Oswald (pictured) was at the window of the Texas School Book Depository as the motorcade carrying John F. Kennedy and his wife Jacqueline passed by. The vehicle had already passed in front of the

The official version of events as told by the Warren Commission report framed the shooting as follows: Lone gunman Lee Harvey Oswald (pictured) was at the window of the Texas School Book Depository as the motorcade carrying John F. Kennedy and his wife Jacqueline passed by. The vehicle had already passed in front of the window when Oswald began shooting, with the assassin's bullets striking the president from behind. The first shot hit Kennedy in the throat, while the second hit him in the head and proved to be fatal.

However, a new documentary on Paramount+, "JFK: What the Doctors Saw," makes clear that some of the medical professionals who were with the dying president disagree with the findings (via Rolling Stone). Executive producer Jacque Lueth interviewed a total of seven doctors who treated JFK at the Parkland Memorial Hospital — where he died. The most compelling point was that Kennedy's throat injury came from a bullet that entered at the front, meaning it was an entrance wound rather than an exit wound — as insisted by the Warren Commission.

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