Mark Mahoney’s Take on the Sixth Floor Museum’s Claims

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The official narrative is that President John F. Kennedy was shot from the window of what is now The Sixth Floor Museum. This was established decades ago, but seeing how it holds up now is imperative. Click here to check out the longer version of Mark Mahoney’s findings.

Keep reading for a brief overview of the same.  

The Sixth Floor Museum Treatment of Witness Testimony

The Dallas museum acknowledges witnesses' accounts of gunfire from the grassy knoll, smoke seen, and suspicious activity near the rail yards.

However, it fails to mention fresh cigarette butts and footprints where the smoke was reported. Lee Bowers' flash of light and an unusual shape in the Moorman photo strengthen the case for an unidentified presence at the scene.

These overlooked clues shed new light on the JFK assassination.

The Contradictions from the Photographic Evidence

The Sixth Floor Museum also states that "the easternmost window on the south wall was half open," though photographic evidence indicates that the window was merely a quarter open.

Additionally, the mention of a paper bag in the far east corner, supposedly used to transport the rifle, belies the absence of this bag in crime scene photos. Moreover, examining the Warren Commission's subchapter, "The Long and Bulky Package," reveals substantial doubts regarding the feasibility of a rifle fitting inside Oswald's bag.

These discrepancies prompt a critical reevaluation of the John F. Kennedy assassination narrative.

 JFK motorcade

The Finger and Palm Prints

The museum asserts that Lee Harvey Oswald's fingerprints and palm prints were discovered on numerous cartons and a paper bag. However, referencing Chapter 4 of the Warren Report, it becomes evident that the Commission itself admitted that the key box at the window, used as a gun rest, and the adjacent box contained no prints attributable to Oswald.

Significantly, Oswald's prints were found on one box and another nearby. This, however, should be considered, given that Oswald was employed in the building, and the Commission acknowledged the possibility that he had handled these cartons as part of his routine duties.

Furthermore, only one of these prints was less than three days old, with the Commission acknowledging that it could have been placed on the carton at any time during this period. Consequently, they concluded that the prints do not definitively establish the exact time Oswald was present.

Read the Blog for More Insights About the Sixth Floor Museum

The Sixth Floor Museum is a harmful exhibit, for most of the tidbits it perpetuates are factoids and have been debunked by photographic evidence and the Warren Commission results. Read the complete blog for a thorough analysis, and follow us to keep tabs on new developments in the JFK assassination.

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