
One of the most respected researchers and writers on the political assassinations of the 1960s, Jim DiEugenio is the author of two books, Destiny Betrayed (1992/2012) and The JFK Assassination: The Evidence Today (2018), co-author of The Assassinations, and co-edited Probe Magazine (1993-2000). See "About Us" for a fuller bio.
Lisa Pease's excellent book on the murder of Bobby Kennedy in 1968 has now been reissued. She has attached a 20-page afterword to the original text. If you have not read it, do so now. It is a classic in that field.
Robert Tanenbaum, a professional prosecutor who was once in charge of a congressional investigation of the murder of JFK, has now passed on. Jim DiEugenio pays his last respects to someone who really wanted to solve the JFK murder.
Mark Shaw continues the Dorothy Kilgallen part of his writing career with his fifth book in nine years. He continues with his Mob-did-it theories and his anti-Kennedys slant. And he now goes after the Luna Committee.
Jim DiEugenio makes a very much belated reply to Tony Summers about his many problems with the book Goddess
Rob Reiner and his wife, Michele, are the fatal victims of an apparent domestic tragedy. Jim DiEugenio's eulogy recounts Reiner's career and his own association with both of them on the proposed mini-series, which turned into the podcast Who Killed JFK?
ABC conceals who Jack Ruby really was, and ignores how he got into position to kill Oswald. It then seals the deal with a reprise of Dale Myers' faulty computer simulation that tries to revive the dead corpse of the Magic Bullet.
ABC spins the Warren Commission fairy tale about Oswald in the Marines, Russia, New Orleans and Mexico City. Nothing about his rightwing pals, the 544 Camp Street flyer, or no photos or voice tapes of him in Mexico City.
ABC sanitizes the debacle of JFK's autopsy and sidesteps the impossible journey of CE 399, the Magic Bullet, from Dallas to Washington.
ABC follows in the footsteps of the Peter Jennings tradition from 2003, and Dan Rather in 1967. Somehow, the Warren Report is something that must be upheld, even 62 years later. No matter what the cost. And it ends up being pretty high. First of four parts
David Sloan's new book tries to further the research on a character who has lurked in the background of the JFK case for too long. That is Gilberto Lopez, who went from Tampa to Dallas, to Nuevo Laredo, to Mexico City, and then Havana right after the assassination.
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