The Kennedy Assassinations - JFK & Bobby Kennedy - Debunking the
Conspiracy Theories written by Mel Ayton and published by Frontline
Books - £25 - Hardback - Pages 248
Few events have been the subject of more conspiracy theories than the assassinations
of the two Kennedy brothers. Indeed, a great many people consider that there were other
individuals than Lee Harvey Oswald and Sirhan Sirhan involved in both murders. Was a
shot fired from Dealey Plaza’s grassy knoll? Why did Jack Ruby shoot Oswald? Was it
the CIA, the Soviets, Cuban nationalists or the Mafia that arranged John Kennedy’s
assassination? Was Robert Kennedy shot from in front and behind, and who had the
most to gain from his death?
These are just a few of the questions that have been put forward by a myriad of conspiracy theorists and it is those people and their ideas that Mel Ayton has tackled head-on. Over many years, Mel Ayton has examined all the more substantial conspiracy theories and, through careful analysis of documents and eyewitness statements, he has demolished each one.
In each case, Mel Ayton presented the results of his detailed investigations in periodicals as he worked through the various theories. These have now been brought together to provide a comprehensive analysis of all the main theories as to who, how and why the two Kennedy brothers met their deaths in such unusual circumstances.
Though wild ideas will continue to be proposed and efforts will still be made to demonstrate that Oswald could not have fired off three shots with great accuracy in the few seconds available to him as the presidential cavalcade passed beneath the window where he crouched, or that there were sinister reasons why three CIA men were allegedly present on the night of Robert Kennedy’s assassination, the harsh reality is that the Kennedy brothers were each killed by lone gunmen.
This is an absorbing read, brought up to date with the addition of new material as it has been uncovered. Maybe, just maybe, this book will persuade people that the official accounts of both murders, although flawed, are not cover-ups but simply statements of fact.
say that it is a well set out book and Mel Ayton argues each point very well. Certainly, an