The assassination has also been the subject of many
time travel and
alternate history stories in
science fiction film, television and literature, many with Kennedy and/or Oswald surviving or other people in the Presidential limousine dead. Some of these have Governor
John Connally or
Jacqueline Kennedy killed in place of President Kennedy.
Literature
Novels
Gideon's March (
Hodder & Stoughton) by
J. J. Marric is fictional novel published in 1962, the year before the Kennedy assassination. In the book, Inspector George Gideon learns of a plot to assassinate President Kennedy during a state visit to London. The assassination is to take place during a parade, by means of a bomb; the assassin, called O'Hara, is a Southern bigot who hates the President for his
Roman-Catholic faith and his
civil-rights initiatives.
Sherlock Holmes in Dallas (
Dodd, Mead, & Co. 1980) by Edmund Aubrey, brings the renowned consulting detective out of his Sussex retirement to investigate the Kennedy assassination.
The
Underworld USA Trilogy (1995-2009) by
James Ellroy, particularly the 1995 novel American Tabloid, constructs a fictional narrative involving several characters who have part in the Kennedy assassination.
In Columbo: The Grassy Knoll (1994) by William Harrington, the titular lieutenant solves the Kennedy Assassination after a talk-show host is murdered before an exposé.[1][2]
The 1996 Doctor Who spin-off novel Who Killed Kennedy features the Doctor's enemy the
Master attempting to kill Oswald before the assassination as Kennedy's survival would trigger a chain reaction in history that could wipe the Doctor from existence, requiring journalist James Stevens to go back in time and kill Kennedy himself (acting as both gunmen at different points in his life, as Oswald's rifle had a misaligned targeting scope that prevented him delivering the fatal shot from the Book Depository on the first trip). It should also be noted that coincidentally, the TV show this book is based on started the day after the assassination with the
first episode delayed by eighty seconds due to news coverage of the killing.[3]
In The Amnesia Desk by Jim Sullivan, the son of Kennedy's 'real' killer - a
CIA assassin - has to flee from the Amnesia Desk, a CIA clean-up team.
Joshua, Son of None by Nancy Mars Freedman (1973,
ISBN9789995585228) is a novel about government officials secretly cloning Kennedy after assassination, and duplicating his actual life events by staging them in the new person's life. By controlling both nature and nurture, genetics and life events, the desired outcome results: the young man is successful, and is elected President.
Comic books
In the first album of
Jean van Hamme and
William Vance's comic book series XIII, the title character is shown to be the alleged assassin of fictional U.S. President William B. Sheridan, who was murdered in his car during an official presidential visit to a city. The events are clearly based on JFK's assassination.[4]
In the
Ultimate Marvel universe, Kennedy's true assassin is
Red Skull, the son of
Captain America.
Nick Fury muses that the assassination of Kennedy was the Skull's way of showing that he would no longer take orders from America.
In the 2008–2009 series The Umbrella Academy: Dallas by
Gerard Way and
Gabriel Bá, the Kennedy assassination is a central plot element. The series initially takes place in a timeline where the assassination never happened, until an organisation of time-travelling assassins go back to 1963 to kill Kennedy. When the Umbrella Academy intercept the gunmen, The Rumour, disguised as
Jacqueline Kennedy, uses her powers to make Kennedy's head explode.
In Superman: Red Son, Superman's space pod crash lands in the
Soviet Union instead of the
United States.
Richard Nixon wins the 1960 Presidential Election, and he is the one who is assassinated in Dallas instead of Kennedy, who in this timeline marries
Marilyn Monroe, and does not become president until decades later in 1998. In 2004 he is succeeded by
Lex Luthor, who with
Jimmy Olsen as his vice president, finally wins this extended version of the
Cold War.
In the 1992 anthology Alternate Kennedys, edited by
Mike Resnick, 25 science fiction authors imagine alternate histories involving the Kennedys, including speculating upon different outcomes of November 22, 1963.
In the 1994 alternate history novel Bubba Ho-Tep and the 2002 film
of the same name by
Joe R. Lansdale, one of the main characters is an African-American man who claims that he is John F. Kennedy and that following his failed assassination attempt, his death was faked, his skin was dyed black and was abandoned by
Lyndon B. Johnson in that same nursing home
Elvis Presley was staying in.
In
Stephen Baxter's novel Voyage (1996), the Dallas assassination attempt only succeeds in crippling Kennedy, but Jacqueline Bouvier Kennedy is killed. Kennedy is re-elected in 1964 and commits the United States to landing a crewed vessel on
Mars, which occurs in 1986. The novel uses the assassination attempt only as the impetus for an alternate history US
space program.
Jeff Golden's 2008 novel Unafraid: A Novel of the Possible speculates on what would have happened had the assassination attempt been unsuccessful, with Kennedy serving two full terms as president. (
ISBN0595471927) Lee Harvey Oswald's rifle jams during the assassination attempt, leaving Kennedy wounded and Governor Connally dead.
In the 2010 book, TimeRiders, a training mission involves going back to November 22, 1963, to stop Lee Harvey Oswald from killing JFK. This results in a new timeline in which a large space program sends a mission to Mars on September 10, 2001. The trainees learn that history corrects itself, and Oswald, who was originally a lone gunman, was no longer alone when he shot the President but was part of a
conspiracy, thanks to their interference with the timestream.
Stephen King's novel 11/22/63, published in 2011, tells about a time traveler trying to stop the assassination. The novel was adapted into a TV series, 11.22.63, in 2016. In both versions, the protagonist succeeds in saving Kennedy and kills Oswald with his own rifle in the Texas Schoolbook Depository after distracting him on the day of the would-be assassination after Oswald fired the first shot at the motorcade, but returns to a dystopian future brought about by his actions, prompting him to return to the past to "reset" the results of his intervention. The protagonist also attempts to prove Oswald was assisted by a Soviet agent when he attempted to kill Kennedy and General
Edwin Walker.
In the 2012 book The Man from 2063, a lawyer living in 2063 travels back in time prior to November 22, 1963, to prevent the assassination. Unlike Stephen King's novel which has Lee Harvey Oswald killing JFK acting alone, The Man from 2063 portrays the assassination as a conspiracy.
In the Space: 1999 graphic novel, Aftershock and Awe (2013), the events of the television series are set within an
alternate history. That history diverged from our own when Kennedy escaped assassination by visiting
Cape Canaveral instead of Dallas. His survival led to an accelerated space race and diminished
Cold War tensions, although a limited nuclear exchange occurred between the United States and
North Korea in 1987.[5] During the 1970s, when the TV show was made, 1999 was the future. Placing the show in an alternate timeline allows the graphic novel to ignore the events of real life history as the series has spacefaring technology advanced beyond that of the real 1999 (or indeed the late 2010s).
In
Ken Davenport's 2017 novel The Two Gates, Kennedy survives the Dallas shooting with the back-to-throat wound he actually received, but First Lady Jackie is killed by the fatal third shot. The novel deals with speculation as to how Kennedy would have dealt with the
Vietnam War had he lived.
In the
SCP Foundation collaborative writing project, the assassination of Kennedy is featured in the 2017 short story SCP-3780 - Who Shot JFK?. SCP-3780 is a series of attempts by time travelers to prevent the assassination of John F. Kennedy by Lee Harvey Oswald. The Temporal Anomalies Department, a division of the SCP Foundation, is tasked with intercepting the attempts to assure or reinstate the proper series of historical events.[6]SCP-3780 - Who Shot JFK? was inspired by the
amount of conspiracy theories and the
release of the assassination files by order of President
Donald Trump.[7][8]
Andy Warhol's 1966 film Since recreated the assassination from multiple perspectives with participants from
The Factory.[9]Since is heavily improvised and explores the media portrayal of the assassination.[9]
French director
Henri Verneuil's 1979 movie I as in Icarus (the story is based in a fictional country with fictional characters but the events are clearly linked with the assassination of John F. Kennedy, including amateur footage similar to the
Zapruder film)
In the 1984 movie Flashpoint, a
United States Border Patrol agent finds a car containing the body of a man he believed participated in a conspiracy to kill President Kennedy and was murdered and robbed of the money he received for doing so.
In the 1987
Kubrick movie Full Metal Jacket the
Marines discuss Oswald. Gunnery Sergeant Hartman comments "Oswald got off three rounds with an old Italian bolt action rifle in only six seconds and scored two hits, including a head shot! Do any of you people know where (Oswald) learned to shoot?" (In the Marines)
The 1990 film Captain America credits the
Red Skull and his organization with Kennedy's and his brother
Robert's assassinations.
The 1992 drama film Love Field features
Michelle Pfeiffer as Lurene Hallett, a Dallas hairdresser, attempting to travel to Washington to attend
John F. Kennedy's funeral. Though the movie encompasses other issues besides the assassination, it portrays one facet of the public reaction to the event.[12]
The 1992 film Ruby is an exploration of certain conspiracy theories surrounding the JFK assassination from
Jack Ruby's perspective.
The 1993 thriller film In the Line of Fire, starring
Clint Eastwood, hinges around the JFK assassination. Set in present-day 1993, the film is about a psychopath who plans to assassinate the current President of the United States. Eastwood's character is Secret Service agent Frank Horrigan, the last remaining active agent who was on duty in November 1963, guarding Kennedy in Dallas. Horrigan is consumed with guilt over his failure to react quickly enough to the first shot in Dallas, and becomes obsessed with defeating a young man who has resolved to become a new assassin on the same level as Lee Harvey Oswald or
John Wilkes Booth.
The 1997 comedic short film My Dinner With Oswald, directed by
Paul Duane, focuses on a re-creation of the assassination at a
Dublin dinner party.
The 1997 dark-comedy dramatic film The House of Yes stars
Parker Posey and
Josh Hamilton as twins Jacqueline, nicknamed "Jackie-O", and Marty. She has the same old mental health issues and he brings home a new fiancée for Thanksgiving. Mayhem ensues including adding incest to their favorite childhood "game" of obsessively re-enacting the
John F. Kennedy assassination.
The 2002 comedy horror film Bubba Ho-tep (based on the
1994 novella of the same name) features
Ossie Davis playing an assassination-obsessed character with a scale model of Dealey Plaza, and photos of the various players on his wall who claims he is Kennedy. He also claimed that after he recovered from the assassination attempt, his skin was dyed black and was abandoned by
Lyndon B. Johnson in a nursing home.
The 2002
mockumentary film Interview with the Assassin presents the assassination and resultant conspiracy theories with a terminally ill former
Marine named Walter Ohlinger who claims that he was the second gunman behind the fence on the grassy knoll and was paid by unidentified government agents for doing so, who are now attempting to silence him for exposing the truth. His ex-wife then tells the interviewer he was also mentally ill and was nowhere near Dallas on the day of the assassination.
Kennedy's assassination is briefly referenced, in the 2007 Disney film National Treasure: Book of Secrets. The title refers to a book supposedly written and maintained by every American President, containing hidden knowledge from U.S. history. Upon being found, a brief section of the book contains photos and handwritten notes, hinting at a government conspiracy.
The 2007 film Shooter, features
Levon Helm's character Mr. Rate talking to
Mark Wahlberg and
Michael Peña about conspiracies. He tells them, "Them boys on the grassy knoll, they were dead within three hours. Buried in the damn desert, unmarked graves out past Terlingua". When asked how he knows this, he replies, "Still got the shovel!"
In the 2013 movie The Bystander Theory, a woman discovers her late grandmother was the
Babushka Lady and finds her film of the assassination, which purportedly also shows a second gunman on the grassy knoll. Her failure to come forward with her film was explained by her husband accidentally killing her and secretly burying her body with the film after the murder of President Kennedy, thinking she was having an affair.
The 2014 movie X-Men: Days of Future Past featured some scenes set in 1973 which reveal that
Magneto has been in prison beneath the Pentagon since 1963 for his apparent role in the Kennedy assassination. Magneto maintains his innocence by claiming he was trying to save Kennedy's life because he claims that Kennedy was one of
their kind, but his efforts were interrupted by the police who arrested him, causing the bullet to curve in midflight.
In the 2016 film The Umbrella Man, set in 1983, a father grieving the death of his son who was killed in a hunting accident becomes obsessed with the assassination and derives a theory that
Louie Witt was the second shooter in Dallas and was urged to do so by the Mafia.
A pair of alternate history films called The Trial of Lee Harvey Oswald made in
1964 and
1977 have the accused assassin not being killed by
Jack Ruby and standing trial for the murder of President Kennedy. Neither film ends in a verdict: the
earlier movie ends after jury instructions, imploring viewers to debate among themselves; while the
latter one has him being shot to death while being escorted from his jail cell to the courtroom just after the jury came back from deliberating.
The 1990 TV movie, Running Against Time, depicts a contemporary schoolteacher (
Robert Hays) who continues to lament the 1966 death of his brother in Vietnam. He is given the chance to go back in time and seeks to prevent the November 1963 assassination, based on the belief that it would prevent
Lyndon Johnson from beginning an escalation of the conflict. However, his attempt results in him being accused of the crime and the subject of a nationwide manhunt. The film is based on the 1986
Stanley Shapiro book
A Time to Remember.
In the 2000 film Timequest, a time-traveler prevents Kennedy's assassination and history takes an alternate course, including the birth of a second son, James Kennedy, who was conceived on the night of November 22, 1963, when Kennedy and his wife return from Dallas. It also has
Robert F. Kennedy becoming president in the late 1970s, with
Martin Luther King Jr. as his vice president, after both men were saved from their assassinations in 1968 by the same time traveler. The film's makers support the idea of a conspiracy by having
Clint Hill shooting two would-be assassins hiding at the grassy knoll and later Jack Ruby to prevent him from killing Oswald.
Television
The 1983
NBC TV mini series Kennedy, which focuses on the Kennedy Presidency, showed the assassination in graphic detail.
The 1985 Twilight Zone episode "
Profile in Silver" depicts a time traveler who is a descendant of Kennedy, attends and accidentally meddles in the timeline continuum.
The two-part 1997 Early Edition episode "The Wall" has Gary Hobson involved in trying to prevent a presidential assassination plot that bears much resemblance to President Kennedy's assassination. During the course of the episode, Gary (who receives tomorrow's newspaper today) finds information about the murder of JFK that has a tie to the current day plot he is trying to stop through finding a copy of the November 23, 1963 newspaper that belonged to his predecessor.
In The Simpsons episode "
Mayored to the Mob", the character Leavelle who trains Homer Simpson at "Leavelle's Bodyguard Academy," is based on Texan detective
Jim Leavelle, as he appeared when escorting
Lee Harvey Oswald when Oswald was shot by
Jack Ruby.[13] Leavelle trains the bodyguards by pretending to shoot their protectee from a grassy knoll on a cart. This is a reference to the
grassy knoll at the site of President
John F. Kennedy's
assassination,
Dealey Plaza and a scene from the Kennedy assassination film Executive Action (1973).[13] In the episode "
Diatribe of a Mad Housewife", Homer and Marge Simpson decide to make their own novel: "Who Really Killed JFK", with Homer's theory being that Lee Harvey Oswald wanted to steal "the Jack Ruby", but then refutes his own idea when Marge tells him that Jack Ruby was a man, not a jewel.
The 2009 Mad Men episode "
The Grown-Ups" focused on the characters' reaction to JFK's assassination and the subsequent events in their personal lives.
The 2010 Bones episode "The Proof in the Pudding" has the characters being forced by the Secret Service to identify cause of death on a highly classified skeleton they later identify as JFK. They determine that JFK was shot twice in the head from two different angles suggesting a second shooter. At one point Booth recreates the assassination in the lab, using a watermelon on a remote controlled car to establish essentially a scale model of the crime, with Hodgins observing that Booth's ability to make the shot doesn't prove anything as Oswald was in much worse physical condition than Booth and would have had more trouble making such a shot. The idea of a conspiracy causes Booth to question his trust in the government until Bones performs another test that determines this skeleton suffered from a bone disorder JFK did not suffer from, meaning this was not JFK. After the skeleton was returned Bones admits in private that JFK had Scarlet Fever as a child and that could have created a false-positive on her test but they were all better off not knowing for certain if that really was JFK.
"The Suspicious Assassination of JFK", released September 29, 2017, was episode 10 of season 2 of
BuzzFeed web series, BuzzFeed Unsolved: True Crime in which the various theories surrounding the assassination were discussed.
Second season of
Netflix series
The Umbrella Academy, based on the
comic book of the same name and released in 2020, is centered around the assassination of JFK, which time travelling protagonists have to investigate to prevent a
nuclear war. In the series the assassination is carried out on the orders of
shadow government, members of which see Kennedy as an obstacle to their plans.
In the 2023 South Park episode "
Japanese Toilet," there are references and spoofs to the
Oliver Stone film JFK, only it talks about a conspiracy of the
toilet paper industry involved in debunking the rising
Japanese toilet market in maintaining its monopoly to the bench scene between
Jimmy who confesses to
Stan after he wrote a story about toilets for the school newspaper, the industry silenced him because they have too much to lose if Americans stop using toilet paper, much like the walk taken by Jim Garrison (
Kevin Costner) and "X" (
Donald Sutherland) in Washington, D.C.
Alternate history in television
"Lee Harvey Oswald", the 1992 season opener for the TV series Quantum Leap, finds
Sam Beckett leaping into
Oswald's body, but various glitches in the Leaping system result in Beckett's mind becoming 'mixed-up' with Oswald's, to the extent that Beckett starts acting like Oswald as he leaps through Oswald's life and gets closer and closer to the date of the assassination. At a critical moment, Al Calavicci prompts him to leap into Secret Service Agent
Clint Hill. Hill attempts to reach the President's car before the shots are fired, but he fails to prevent Kennedy's death.
Calavicci later reveals that he and Beckett have saved one life – that of Jackie Kennedy, whom Oswald had killed along with the President in the original timeline. This episode was written by series creator
Donald P. Bellisario, in response to the Oliver Stone film JFK. Bellisario, who served with Oswald in the
Marine Corps, does not believe in a conspiracy; he used supporting evidence from the Warren Commission Report, and had Calavicci speculate that people find it comfortable to believe in a conspiracy, reasoning that if any one person can kill the President of the United States then nobody is safe.
In the Red Dwarf 1997 episode "
Tikka to Ride", the characters accidentally knock Lee Harvey Oswald out of the fifth-floor window of the Book Depository when they travel back in time to 1963 by mistake, creating an alternate timeline where Kennedy is impeached in 1965 for sharing a mistress with a mafia boss. Jumping forward in time to 1966, the crew learn that, due to Kennedy's impeachment,
J. Edgar Hoover was blackmailed into running for president by the mob and allows Russia to establish nuclear missiles in Cuba, while Kennedy's impeachment traumatised the nation and allowed the USSR to win the space race while the southern states flee due to the fear of missiles from Cuba.
Fearing the repercussions of this timeline, the crew go back to 1963 and redirect Oswald up to the sixth floor before their past selves can kill him, but realise that at that angle Oswald's trajectory is now too steep for him to do more than wound Kennedy. Unwilling to kill Kennedy themselves, the characters travel to 1965 and convince the alternate John F. Kennedy to go back in time and shoot his past self from the grassy knoll, arguing that this action will restore his historical position as a liberal icon. "
Timeslides", an earlier episode of Red Dwarf, also jokingly mentions the possibility of preventing the assassination.
In
American Heroes Channel's What if? Armageddon 1962,
Richard Pavlick succeeds in assassinating President-elect Kennedy, and
Lyndon Johnson is sworn in on January 20, 1961. While the
Bay of Pigs invasion goes as it historically did, the
Cuban Missile Crisis is different. Having more confidence in his military advisers than Kennedy did, Johnson authorizes military air strikes to take out the missile sites. However, some missiles were hidden from sight and the United States, Cuba and the Soviet Union engage in a nuclear war.
In a 2018 episode of the TV series Timeless, a young Kennedy is transported to 2018, and before he can be returned to 1934, he is warned not to go to Dallas in 1963. When the time travelers return to 2018, they are told he was killed in
Austin, Texas after two years as president.
In a 2021 episode of the Netflix series "Inside Job" an old man known as Grassy Noel Atkinson is given credit for the Kennedy Assassination and later helps to kill the JFK clones that are trying to escape the Cognito Inc. facilities in DC.
Stage productions
The 1967 satirical play MacBird! by Barbara Garson
superimposes the events of the assassination on the general plot structure of Shakespeare's Macbeth, with Kennedy becoming murdered king "Ken O'Dunc" and Lyndon Johnson the treacherous title character. The mockery of the play's name is derived from Johnson's propensity to refer to his wife Claudia as "Lady Bird" and his elder daughter as "Lynda Bird." Garson insisted that her play was a satire and not intended to suggest seriously that Johnson had had a hand in the assassination.[14]
In 1975, a
San Francisco-based group of artists called
Ant Farm reenacted the Kennedy assassination in Dealey Plaza, and documented it in a video called The Eternal Frame.
Music
Over 200 songs have been released about JFK, most of which were released following the assassination.[15]
In 1965,
Jugoton released a 17 minute long recording of the epic poem "Smrt u Dalasu" (Death in Dallas) sung by Jozo Karamatić,
Croatianguslar from
Herzegovina.[16][17] The lyrics were written by Božo Lasić.[17]
The 1968
Rolling Stones song "
Sympathy for the Devil" references both John and brother Robert's assassinations with the lyric, "I shouted out / Who killed the Kennedys? / When after all / It was you and me."
Allen Ginsberg's 1975 poem Hadda Be Playing on the Jukebox references the Kennedy assassination and the supposed involvement of the
Mafia and the
CIA, saying "Kennedy stretched and smiled and got double-crossed by lowlife goons and agents".[18]
The 1978
Misfits single "
Bullet" describes the events around the assassination, stating that "Texas is the reason" for his death in lyrics directed towards
Jacqueline Kennedy, in addition to sexual demands.
The English rock duo
Godley & Creme song "Lonnie" is the 7th track on the 1980 album Ismism featuring lyrics about a man named Lonnie Garamond who kills Kennedy with a camera gun.[19]
The British
Heavy Metal band
Saxon released the track Dallas 1 p.m. on their 1980 album
Strong Arm of the Law.[20] The track has remained a staple song in Saxon's set list up until the 2020s.[21]
The
Human League song
"Seconds" from their 1981 album Dare deals directly with the Kennedy assassination and is directed at Lee Harvey Oswald.[22] When playing live, the group regularly projected slides onto the background of the stage, and would play this song in front of images of Kennedy and the assassination in Dallas.[22]
The
Was (Not Was) songs "11 Miles An Hour" and "11 MPH (Abe Zapp Ruder Version)" on respective International and US-Japan releases of their 1988 album What Up, Dog? is about the JFK assassination and the speed the car was going, as well as referencing
Abraham Zapruder and the
Zapruder film of the event.
Billy Joel's song "
We Didn't Start the Fire" mentions the JFK assassination in the lyrics "JFK blow away what else do I have to say?!".
The 1990 Broadway musical Assassins, written by
Stephen Sondheim and John Weidman, climaxes as the ghosts of
John Wilkes Booth,
Leon Czolgosz,
Charles Guiteau, and other "would be" assassins including
John Hinckley, appear before a suicidally depressed Lee Harvey Oswald, and convince him that the only way for him to truly connect with his country is to share his pain and disillusionment with it.[23]
The 1998
Steve Gillette song "Two Men in the Building" on his album Texas & Tennessee is mostly about the assassination, in fact presenting Steve's own theory about it.[24] Steve is a well-known songwriter, best known as the co-writer of the song Darcy Farrow.
Reelect JFK, in which Kennedy is a playable character, set in an
alternative timeline, where he survives his assassination attempt, and attempts to seek reelection in 1964, while confronting key political issues such as Vietnam and the Civil Rights Movement, and discovering who was responsible for the assassination attempt on his life.[25]
The 2004 video game JFK Reloaded puts the player in the role of
Lee Harvey Oswald, where the player is then scored on how closely one's version of the
assassination matches the report of the
Warren Commission: first shot missed, second hit JFK and Governor Connally and third on JFK's head. According to the company, the primary aim of the game was "to establish the most likely facts of what happened on 1963-11-22 by running the world's first mass-participation forensic construction", the theory being that a player could help prove that Lee Harvey Oswald had the "means and the opportunity to commit the crime", and thus help prove the
Warren Commission's findings.[26]
The 2010 video game Call of Duty: Black Ops gives hints that the main player character Alex Mason (
Sam Worthington) is
brainwashed by the
Soviet Union into assassinating Kennedy within the context of the video game. An ending cutscene shows Mason was in the crowd of onlookers who watched Kennedy disembark from Air Force One in Lovefield.
In the post-credits scene of the 2016 video game Mafia III, Lincoln Clay's former CIA handler in Vietnam and Lincoln's intelligence provider in order to take down the Marcano Crime Family, John Donovan, has been invited to a Senate Committee hearing in 1971 to testify his participation in Lincoln's revenge against the Marcanos, Donovan explains that he helped Lincoln was due to evidence that he uncovered that Sal, the boss of the Marcano Crime family, has been one of the conspirators of the assassination of Kennedy, and further evidence states that one of the senators presiding over the hearing as another conspirator, Donovan then later pulls his silenced pistol and kills the senator, stating that he will hunt down those responsible for the death of Kennedy.
^A Random Day (March 28, 2009).
"SCP-3780 / Discussion". Retrieved October 3, 2022. This was inspired by the release of the JFK Assassination files yesterday and how funny it would be if the only conspiracy was that there wasn't one at all.
^
abCox, Alex (2009). 10,000 Ways to Die: A Director's Take on the Spaghetti Western. Oldcastle Books.
ISBN978-1842433041.
^Nicholas Cullather has discussed "The Movie Version" of John F. Kennedy's assassination in Nicholas Cullather, "History, Conspiracy, and the Kennedy Assassination," Retrieving the American Past, ed. Marc Horger (New York: Pearson Custom Publishing, 2005), 301-330.