5
THINGS YOU MIGHT NOT KNOW ABOUT JFK'S ASSASSINATION
By Tricia Escobedo,
CNN
(CNN) -- This year
will mark 51 years since President
John F. Kennedy was assassinated in Dallas on
November 22, 1963. Whether you were alive at the time or not, you probably know
that Lee Harvey Oswald killed the President, only to be fatally gunned down by
Jack Ruby two days later.
You probably
also know there
are hundreds of conspiracy theories about who was behind the assassination,
and whether Oswald was the lone gunman or if there was another shooter on the
infamous grassy knoll.
Here are
five things you may not know about the assassination of the 35th president of
the United States:
1. Oswald
wasn't arrested for JFK killing
Lee Harvey Oswald was actually arrested for
fatally shooting a police officer, Dallas patrolman J.D. Tippitt, 45 minutes
after killing Kennedy. He denied killing either one and, as he was being
transferred to county jail two days later, he was shot and killed by Dallas
nightclub operator Jack Ruby.
2.
Assassinating the president wasn't a federal crime in 1963
President John F. Kennedy moments before he was assassinated on November
22, 1963, in Dallas
Despite the assassinations of three U.S.
presidents -- Abraham Lincoln, James Garfield and William McKinley -- killing
or attempting to harm a president wasn't a federal offense until 1965, two
years after Kennedy's death.
3. TV
networks suspended shows for four days
The NBC News Bureau covers the assassination of
Kennedy.
On November 22, 1963, at 12:40 p.m. CST -- just 10
minutes after President Kennedy was shot -- CBS broadcast the first nationwide
TV news bulletin on the shooting. After that, all three television networks --
CBS, NBC, and ABC -- interrupted their regular programming to cover the
assassination for four straight days. The JFK assassination was the longest
uninterrupted news event on television until the coverage of the September 11
attacks in 2001.
4. It led to
the first and only time a woman swore in a U.S.
president
Sarah Hughes, lower left, became the only woman to preside over a
presidential oath when she swore in Lyndon Johnson.
Hours after the assassination, Vice President
Lyndon Johnson wassworn in as president aboard Air
Force One, with Jacqueline Kennedy at his side, an event
captured in an iconic photograph. Federal Judge Sarah Hughes administered the
oath, the only woman ever to do so.
5. Oswald
had tried to assassinate Kennedy foe
Eight months before Oswald assassinated JFK, he tried
to kill an outspoken anti-communist, former U.S. Army Gen. Edwin Walker. After
his resignation from the U.S. Army in 1961, Walker became an outspoken critic
of the Kennedy administration and actively opposed the move to racially
integrate schools in the South. The Warren Commission, charged with
investigating Kennedy's 1963 assassination, found that Oswald had tried to
shoot and kill Walker while the retired general was inside his home. Walker
suffered minor injuries from bullet fragments.
http://edition.cnn.com/2013/11/14/us/jfk-assassination-5-things/
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