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Over the past half century, opinion has been divided as to the role
of Lee Harvey Oswald in the assassination of President John F
Kennedy. The rumours began to spread almost immediately that the
accused assassin may have been working for or was being manipulated
by individuals involved with the United States Intelligence
apparatus. The most tantalising piece of evidence came from none
other than Congressman Gerald R Ford, who had served as a Warren
Commission member in 1964. Ford revealed in his (co-written) 1965
book "Oswald: Portrait of the Assassin" that the FBI had an
'undercover agent' in Dallas at the time of the assassination and
that that agent was none other than Lee Harvey Oswald, the alleged
assassin of President Kennedy. The two most asked questions in the
whole JFK assassination story remain unanswered: Who was Lee Harvey
Oswald and what was his role on 22 November 1963? In this book
Glenn B Fleming looks at these claims and presents a compelling
case that all is not as we have been told about accussed assassin
Lee Harvey Oswald.
Of all the millions of words written in anger or certainty
regarding arguably the greatest murder mystery of all time, the
assassination of President John Fitzgerald Kennedy, one testimony
remains glaringly absent. The deposition of Lee Harvey Oswald, the
alleged assassin, was silenced by Jack Ruby's bullet before he
could tell his story to a shocked and grieving world. The Two Faces
of Lee Harvey Oswald is a unique work. No other book in the public
domain concentrates on Lee Oswald's point of view; a young man
caught up by, then hopelessly trapped in, history. From the moment
of his return from the Soviet Union, Oswald became tangled in a web
of intrigue, deception and murder. And yet, no amount of
speculation or rumour mongering can lend history in general and
Oswald in particular, his own words. "I'm just a patsy!" Oswald
screamed, as he was led along a corridor in the Dallas Police
Building, shortly after his arrest that fateful weekend. We will
never truly know how innocent, or guilty, Oswald was. But his
memory deserves a hearing. The most accurate hearing possible.
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