16-09-2011, 02:59 AM
[URL="http://groups.yahoo.com/group/NoPoliceStateCoalition/message/8256Man"]http://groups.yahoo.com/group/NoPoliceStateCoalition/message/8256
Man[/URL] grazed by JFK bullet spreading gospel of cover-up. By Maggie Souza
i tried at the article site to bring it up, but it appears it is not accessible now so...the yahoo group link appears to be the only, TAGUE has written a book on his part and calls the assassination a cover-up...
this was a 2008 article resurfaced;
Wednesday, October 08, 2008
In the hours after John F. Kennedy was assassinated, James T. Tague went down to the Dallas police station to give a statement of what he had seen.
Speaking Tuesday night to a group of about 20 people at the Longview Public Library, Tague once again recounted the afternoon: Late for a date, he had gotten out of his car to find out why traffic had stopped. He soon realized it was because of the president's motorcade.
As Tague watched the procession make its way down the street, he heard what sounded like a firecracker go off, followed by rifle shots. The next thing he knew, a man standing on the grassy knoll nearby yelled out, "His head exploded! His head exploded!"
Kennedy had been shot.
Caught up in the commotion, it took Tague a moment to realize that his face had been grazed by shrapnel after a bullet struck the curb near where he was standing.
Like many other witnesses, Tague was drawn into the initial investigation, asked by officials to recount what he had seen.
Nearly 45 years later, Tague continues to tell audiences of his observations and about the cover-up he believes the government was in on.
"Kennedy was murdered by our own government," Tague said. "They wanted (Lyndon) Johnson in the White House. Everyone around Johnson wanted him" to be president.
Tague's interest in the 1963 shooting led him to evidence that he says points to the government's involvement in the assassination.
After years of digging, he has completed his book, "Truth Withheld."
"The story needs to be told," Tague said.
One of the things that convinced him that the government had Kennedy killed was a memo he saw from J. Edgar Hoover, then the director of the FBI. Tague said that in the memo, which was sent out about two days after the shooting, Hoover stated that the job of the FBI was to convince the public that Lee Harvey Oswald was the real assassin.
More proof of the conspiracy was the faulty information that the Warren Commission went on in its investigation into the shooting, Tague said.
The commission, which eventually determined that Oswald had acted alone, had gotten all of its information from the FBI a bureau headed by the very man who helped orchestrate the assassination, Tague said.
"This was a planned-out thing," he said. "The cover-up is simple enough."
Tague is not the first to question the findings of the Warren Commission.
In 1992, the Assassination Records Review Board was created by the JFK Records Act to collect and preserve the documents relating to the assassination. According to the Federation of American Scientists, the review board pointed out in its final report:
"Doubts about the Warren Commission's findings were not restricted to ordinary Americans. Well before 1978, President Johnson, Robert Kennedy and four of the seven members of the Warren Commission all articulated, if sometimes off the record, some level of skepticism about the commission's basic findings."
According to jfkassassination.net, three other U.S. government investigations have agreed with the Warren Commission's conclusion that two shots struck JFK from the rear: the 1968 panel set by Attorney General Ramsey Clark, the 1975 Rockefeller Commission, and the 1978-79 House Select Committee on Assassinations, which re-examined the evidence with the help of a forensics panel.
Tague admits that nobody will ever know the exact truth about what happened. There are a number of details that he said he isn't sure about how many shooters there were, for instance. But he is positive of at least one thing: "This is a complete cover-up of a coup d'etat."
http://www.jamestague.com/
Man[/URL] grazed by JFK bullet spreading gospel of cover-up. By Maggie Souza
i tried at the article site to bring it up, but it appears it is not accessible now so...the yahoo group link appears to be the only, TAGUE has written a book on his part and calls the assassination a cover-up...
this was a 2008 article resurfaced;
Wednesday, October 08, 2008
In the hours after John F. Kennedy was assassinated, James T. Tague went down to the Dallas police station to give a statement of what he had seen.
Speaking Tuesday night to a group of about 20 people at the Longview Public Library, Tague once again recounted the afternoon: Late for a date, he had gotten out of his car to find out why traffic had stopped. He soon realized it was because of the president's motorcade.
As Tague watched the procession make its way down the street, he heard what sounded like a firecracker go off, followed by rifle shots. The next thing he knew, a man standing on the grassy knoll nearby yelled out, "His head exploded! His head exploded!"
Kennedy had been shot.
Caught up in the commotion, it took Tague a moment to realize that his face had been grazed by shrapnel after a bullet struck the curb near where he was standing.
Like many other witnesses, Tague was drawn into the initial investigation, asked by officials to recount what he had seen.
Nearly 45 years later, Tague continues to tell audiences of his observations and about the cover-up he believes the government was in on.
"Kennedy was murdered by our own government," Tague said. "They wanted (Lyndon) Johnson in the White House. Everyone around Johnson wanted him" to be president.
Tague's interest in the 1963 shooting led him to evidence that he says points to the government's involvement in the assassination.
After years of digging, he has completed his book, "Truth Withheld."
"The story needs to be told," Tague said.
One of the things that convinced him that the government had Kennedy killed was a memo he saw from J. Edgar Hoover, then the director of the FBI. Tague said that in the memo, which was sent out about two days after the shooting, Hoover stated that the job of the FBI was to convince the public that Lee Harvey Oswald was the real assassin.
More proof of the conspiracy was the faulty information that the Warren Commission went on in its investigation into the shooting, Tague said.
The commission, which eventually determined that Oswald had acted alone, had gotten all of its information from the FBI a bureau headed by the very man who helped orchestrate the assassination, Tague said.
"This was a planned-out thing," he said. "The cover-up is simple enough."
Tague is not the first to question the findings of the Warren Commission.
In 1992, the Assassination Records Review Board was created by the JFK Records Act to collect and preserve the documents relating to the assassination. According to the Federation of American Scientists, the review board pointed out in its final report:
"Doubts about the Warren Commission's findings were not restricted to ordinary Americans. Well before 1978, President Johnson, Robert Kennedy and four of the seven members of the Warren Commission all articulated, if sometimes off the record, some level of skepticism about the commission's basic findings."
According to jfkassassination.net, three other U.S. government investigations have agreed with the Warren Commission's conclusion that two shots struck JFK from the rear: the 1968 panel set by Attorney General Ramsey Clark, the 1975 Rockefeller Commission, and the 1978-79 House Select Committee on Assassinations, which re-examined the evidence with the help of a forensics panel.
Tague admits that nobody will ever know the exact truth about what happened. There are a number of details that he said he isn't sure about how many shooters there were, for instance. But he is positive of at least one thing: "This is a complete cover-up of a coup d'etat."
http://www.jamestague.com/