The Kennedy Assassination A Friendly Fire Theory

This article was last updated on April 16, 2022

Canada: Free $30 Oye! Times readers Get FREE $30 to spend on Amazon, Walmart…
USA: Free $30 Oye! Times readers Get FREE $30 to spend on Amazon, Walmart…Fifty years ago today, the world came to a standstill while it digested the assassination of American President John F. Kennedy.  As a young lad, I can quite clearly remember much of the news coverage of that day and the following days, largely because I was absent from school because of an illness.  I can still remember walking through K-Mart and seeing the coverage by the major television networks.  Since that time, one of my "hobbies" has been researching the Kennedy assassination and trying to understand what alternative scenarios are plausible, given that the scenario presented by the Warren Commission seems, in hind sight, to be rather unlikely.

 
One of the most interesting but little discussed scenarios involves a "friendly fire" incident.  In this scenario, one does not have to invoke a "foil hat conspiracy" that involves the Chicago Mafia or the military-industrial complex, rather, a simple accident could explain the untimely death of President Kennedy.
 
Decades ago, ballistics and firearms expert Howard Donahue proposed a theory that Secret Service agents in the car following the Presidential limousine may have accidentally shot the President.  According to Mr. Donahue's theory, Lee Harvey Oswald was able to fire twice at the President with the first shot showering the car with fragments that slightly wounded Kennedy.  Owald's second shot then struck Kennedy in the back of the neck, passed through the front of his neck and then went on to injure Texas Governor John Connally (the Single Bullet Theory).  Seconds later, the shot that killed the President was fired from the follow-up Secret Service vehicle.  This shot was fired by 40 year old Secret Service Agent George Hickey Jr. after he picked up and cocked his automatic Colt AR-15 from the floor of the car in response to the sound of gunfire.  When the motorcade came to a sudden halt, Agent Hickey accidentally pulled the trigger, firing a bullet at the back of Kennedy's head.
 
Here is a photograph showing the Secret Service follow-up vehicle immediately behind the President's limousine just before it enters Dealey Plaza:
 
 
Here are several of the arguments for this theory:
 
1.) The bullet that caused Kennedy's fatal head wound behaved like a high-velocity frangible bullet.  Oswald used medium-velocity, non-frangible ammunition.  Secret Service Agent Hickey was seen with an AR-15 rifle around the time that the head shot was fired; the AR-15 fires high-velocity, frangible ammunition.
 
2.) Witnesses in Dealey Plaza reported that there were two shots fired nearly simultaneously, far too fast to have been fired from Oswald's bolt-action Mannlicher-Carcano rifle.
 
3.) The reported diameter of the bullet wound on the back of Kennedy's head was 6.0 millimetres compared to the 6.5 millimetre ammunition used in Oswald's Carcano rifle.
 
4.) The damage to the windshield on the President's limousine was too high to have been caused by a projectile fired from the sixth floor of the School Book Depository.
 
5.) Witnesses at street level reported the smell of gunpowder, particularly in the northwest corner of Dealey Plaza.  Texas Senator Ralph Yarborough who was riding in the second car behind the Presidential limousine reported that he smelled gunpowder in the street and that it clung to the car throughout the race to Parkland Hospital.  One of the accompanying motorcycle policemen, Officer B. J. Martin also recalled " … you could smell the gunpowder … you knew he wasn't that far away. When you're that close you can smell the powder burning … Why, you can smell the gunpowder … right there in the street." 
Interestingly, in 1995 Secret Service Agent George Hickey sued Bonar Menninger, the author of the 1992 book "Mortal Error: The Shot That Killed JFK", a book about the "friendly fire" accidental shooting of the President but the case was dismissed because the judge in the case ruled that the time between the filing of the suit and the publication of the book was beyond the one-year statute of limitations.  After an appeal, the publishers of the book, St. Martin's, paid Agent Hickey an undisclosed sum of money.  In case you are interested, here is a link to the Hickey suit against St. Martin's with a detailed list of the erroneous claims made in Menninger's book.
 
George Hickey passed away in 2011.
 
While I think that this theory is more than a bit of a stretch, it is unique in its complete lack of a conspiracy, a rather rare commodity in the world of JFK assassination theories.  That, however, does not necessarily make it more plausible.  Unfortunately, as shown here, fifty years on, the majority of Americans still believe that President Kennedy's death was a conspiracy:
 

It is our skepticism about government openness that has kept the JFK assassination conspiracy theorists in business for five long decades.  With the current level of mistrust in government now, one can only imagine how many conspiracy theories would exist if there were another high profile political assassination today.
 
Click HERE to read more of Glen Asher's columns
Share with friends
You can publish this article on your website as long as you provide a link back to this page.

Be the first to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.


*