LBJ and Nixon Linked to JFK Assassination in Newly Discovered Documents

JFK Assassination Unraveled: Documents Allegedly Confirm LBJ and Nixon’s Involvement in President’s Death

 

In a stunning revelation, recently uncovered documents suggest that Lyndon B. Johnson and Richard Nixon played pivotal roles in the assassination of John F. Kennedy. Historians are now re-evaluating the dynamics of that tragic day in history, with new insights stemming from the release of the Warren Commission Documents.

 

Renowned expert Gary Fannin has made a bold claim, stating, “In my assessment, LBJ was 99.5 percent responsible for this.” While he notes Nixon may not have had prior knowledge of the murder, he indicates that Nixon was certainly part of the subsequent cover-up. Another historian provides a darker interpretation, suggesting Nixon struck a sinister deal with Johnson. This alleged pact allowed Johnson to ascend to the presidency, with the understanding that he would not seek re-election, effectively paving the way for Nixon’s return to power.

 

The documents that have fueled these claims include a particular FBI file from 1947 that reveals infamous nightclub owner Jack Ruby, who fatally shot accused assassin Lee Harvey Oswald, was allegedly tied to Nixon’s operations. Ruby was part of Nixon’s inner circle during his tenure as a senator, supposedly carrying out “information functions” for him.

 

After being apprehended for Oswald’s murder, Ruby purportedly smuggled a letter from prison that implicated Johnson in the assassination. He claimed that only Johnson possessed knowledge of Kennedy’s motorcade route, casting a suspicious light on the former president. Dorothy Kilgallen, a journalist who interviewed Ruby, met an untimely death that some consider suspicious, leading to speculation that she might have been silenced for her insights.

 

Fanning notes that Johnson was part of a broader intelligence network during this tumultuous period, including meetings with FBI director J. Edgar Hoover shortly before the assassination occurred. While the Warren Commission determined that Oswald acted alone, Nixon later made comments on a secretly recorded tape, insisting that the investigation was “the greatest hoax that has ever been perpetrated.”

 

While some conspiracy theorists still argue that Oswald was solely responsible, possibly aided by rogue CIA agents angry over Kennedy’s handling of the Bay of Pigs invasion, the newly accessed documents raise more questions than answers, with more than 3,000 files remaining classified despite previous government commitments to transparency.

 

In the wake of these revelations, the narrative around Kennedy’s assassination continues to evolve, with new theories and evidence prompting a revisitation of one of the most chilling events in American history.

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