Kennedy assassination and LBJ
... Kennedy was the 35th President of the United States (The Kennedy). ... Kennedy had acquired much love and fame during his presidency (Biography). There were, however, those who did not feel happy about Kennedy being President, and on Nov 22, 1963, Kennedy was assassinated in his motorcade as he was driving through Dallas, Texas. One such person who did not like Kennedy appears to have been FBI director, J. ... Hoover did not like Kennedy, because he knew that Kennedy would force him to retire as FBI director upon his reelection in 1964. ... Lyndon Johnson did not like Kennedy because he felt certain that Kennedy would defeat him as President in the election in 1964 (Crenshaw, xii). ... Kennedy. After the assassination of JFK, people began saying that the assassination was a conspiracy. ... There is much evidence indicating that the assassination of John F. Kennedy was a conspiracy. The Warren Commission was an order executed by Lyndon Johnson to examine and investigate the assassination, the injury of John Connally, and the death of a Dallas police officer (The Kennedy). ... It also said that one of those three bullets wounded both Connally and Kennedy, one missed and hit the pavement, and that the last hit Kennedy’s head and killed him (The Kennedy). ... After Kennedy was assassinated, an autopsy was required in order to observe the wounds. According to Texas law, the autopsy of the President had to be performed in Texas (The Kennedy). ... Kennedy’s body was removed from Dallas before an autopsy could be performed. ... Kennedy to be transferred, his corpse was wrapped around in a silk sheet inside an expensive ornamental bronze casket, but when his body arrived in Washington, it was wrapped in a normal body bag inside a plain casket. ... Kennedy’s body had been messed with on the trip between Dallas to Washington (Oglesby). The assassination would have been easier to investigate, if there were more films and pictures for evidence. Actually, there were many films and pictures taken by eyewitnesses at the scene of the assassination, but they were all confiscated (Oglesby).