Where were you when JFK was shot? Of all the unanswered questions
that have come out of the assassination of President Kennedy,
conspiracy theorists claim one question still hasn’t been officially
answered. Who shot JFK? Oh, sure the government and the official
House Select Committee on Assassinations (HSCA) have their answer.
You know the one---Oswald was leaning over a ledge and he fired the
only shots. But what about the smoke that came from Dealey Plaza?
What about the witnesses who claim to have seen someone with a rifle
in by the Grassy Knoll Fence? How about the fact that the HSCA
actually pinpointed a spot--the spot exactly where the HSCA fence
post was imbedded into the ground---the position where they claimed a
shooter was located, “one of the two gunman firing at the President.”
Never in the history of virtually priceless American artifacts has
such a major piece come to light as these HSCA Dealey Plaza fence
pieces (imagine being able to purchase the theatre seat where Lincoln
was shot!). Photographs taken at the precise moments that shots were
fired at JFK--the exact seconds--have been analyzed over the course
of decades using scientific equipment which, of course, wasn’t
available back in 1963. Photographs which place the unknown gunman,
to repeat the HSCA finding, place the gunman at the top of the grassy
knoll right at the so-called HSCA Fence Post. Part of this theory
relates to the undisputed and undeniable fact that a woman by the
name of Mary Moorman was taking Polaroid pictures at the precise
instance that JFK was shot. Included in her photos is one that
researches claim shows a man standing by the fence firing a rifle.
Moorman (who was never interviewed by the Warren Commission) claimed
she heard three or four shots. Unwashed and unpainted, weathered
naturally over the past four decades, these six pieces of the
original fencing have remained in the same Grassy Knoll position
where it was on November 22, 1963. Use them for your own Grassy Knoll
Room, use in murals, paintings, other works of art, give pieces as
gifts, sell them by the piece or just keep the whole thing as a one
of a kind important historical artifact.