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Quiz about Lee Harvey Oswald Patsy Or Lone Assassin
Quiz about Lee Harvey Oswald Patsy Or Lone Assassin

Lee Harvey Oswald: Patsy Or Lone Assassin? Quiz


Was Lee Harvey Oswald the lone assassin of the murder the president? Was he part of a conspiracy that involved Lyndon B. Johnson, the CIA, and the FBI? Was Oswald a patsy like he claimed? To find out the answers, enter if you dare.

A multiple-choice quiz by DakotaNorth. Estimated time: 6 mins.
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Author
DakotaNorth
Time
6 mins
Type
Multiple Choice
Quiz #
79,381
Updated
Dec 03 21
# Qns
15
Difficulty
Average
Avg Score
9 / 15
Plays
1265
Last 3 plays: Guest 136 (11/15), RobertLee_1964 (6/15), FPDivvensSr (9/15).
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Question 1 of 15
1. Five days before the assassination, the FBI offices received a telexed message warning of the assassination of the President at the end of the week in Dallas. To which FBI office was the warning first sent to? Hint


Question 2 of 15
2. On November 22, an hour before the murder, a woman was driving west past the grassy knoll. She found herself caught in heavy traffic and stopped right next to a green pickup truck. She saw a man taking a rifle out of the bed of the truck, and walk up the steep incline onto the grassy knoll. What was the name of this woman? Hint


Question 3 of 15
3. A few minutes before the assassination, the switchman for the railroad yard was in his glassed-in tower, 14 feet above the yard. The switchman had a bird's eye view of the grassy knoll. He observed two men, whom he did not recognize, standing behind the picket fence on the knoll, watching the approaching motorcade. What was the name of the switchman? Hint


Question 4 of 15
4. At the time the President was shot at, a Dallas roofing worker said he saw one man running towards the passenger cars on the railroad siding. The roofing worker said the man who was running had something in his hand. What was the name of the roofing worker? Hint


Question 5 of 15
5. Some witnesses on this fateful day said that they not only heard shots coming from the picket fence, but that they also saw smoke, from rifles being fired, wafting up through the cluster of trees near the fence. They also had the impression that the assassins had escaped from the grassy knoll after the shooting. One of these witness was a police officer who was escorting the Presidential motorcade. The police officer took off towards the picket fence when he heard the shooting. What was the name of the officer? Hint


Question 6 of 15
6. During the shooting of the President, a man standing under the Triple Underpass was hit in the face by a bullet fragment. The Triple Underpass was about 50-75 feet away from the Texas Schoolbook Depository, and about 20-25 feet away from the President's limousine. What was the name of the man standing under the Underpass? Hint


Question 7 of 15
7. At the same time as the President was shot, a man was standing on an abutment, with his back facing the picket fence. This man had in his hands a home movie camera and he was filming the Presidential motorcade. To his astonishment he filmed the entire assassination. What is the name of this man?

Answer: (Two Words. Either full name or sur name. Spelling is important. There are no variations.)
Question 8 of 15
8. The same day that the President was murdered, a man named Jack Martin was pistol whipped in an upstairs office at 531 Lafayette Street in New Orleans. The man who pistol whipped him was a private investigator and a former member of the FBI. What was his name? Hint


Question 9 of 15
9. An hour after the President was murdered, a man drove from New Orleans, LA to Houston, TX. When questioned by New Orleans District Attorney, Jim Garrison, about his possible involvement in the assassination of the President, this man changed his story. What is the name of this man? Hint


Question 10 of 15
10. In 1959 Lee Harvey Oswald had taken a foreign language test while in the Marines. What foreign language was the test on?

Answer: (One Word. Spelling is important. There are no other)
Question 11 of 15
11. On November 22, 1963, at 1:15 P.M., a man, whom some people have identified as Lee Harvey Oswald, was seen walking near Tenth Street and Patton Avenue. At that time an officer called the man over. What happened next was a shock to witnesses. What was the name of the officer? Hint


Question 12 of 15
12. Around 3:00 pm on that fateful day, Oswald was arrested at a movie theatre, which was located on West Jefferson Street. What was the name of the theatre?

Answer: (Two Words)
Question 13 of 15
13. The House Select Committee on Assassinations never verified that Oswald was the assassin, or even one of the gunmen.


Question 14 of 15
14. Sixty seconds after the assassination, Oswald was observed in the break room of the Texas Schoolbook Depository by a police officer. What was the name of the officer? Hint


Question 15 of 15
15. There was a photograph that allegedly depicted Oswald standing outside of the Depository when the assassination happened.



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Most Recent Scores
Dec 20 2024 : Guest 136: 11/15
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quiz
Quiz Answer Key and Fun Facts
1. Five days before the assassination, the FBI offices received a telexed message warning of the assassination of the President at the end of the week in Dallas. To which FBI office was the warning first sent to?

Answer: New Orleans Office

Five days before the murder of John F. Kennedy, the New Orleans FBI Office received a message, via telex, that the President would be killed in Dallas at the end of the week.

This warning was sent to all the FBI offices in the United States, but the Secret Service did not receive any warning. Amazingly, after the murder, the original telex message was removed from the file drawers, and more amazingly, in every FBI office in the country every copy of the warning was destroyed. One wonders who could have sent the warning.
2. On November 22, an hour before the murder, a woman was driving west past the grassy knoll. She found herself caught in heavy traffic and stopped right next to a green pickup truck. She saw a man taking a rifle out of the bed of the truck, and walk up the steep incline onto the grassy knoll. What was the name of this woman?

Answer: Julia Ann Mercer

An hour before the murder, Julia Ann Mercer was driving west past the grassy knoll. She found herself caught in heavy traffic and stopped right next to a green pickup truck. She saw a man taking a rifle out of the bed of the truck, and walk up the steep incline onto the grassy knoll. At first she thought the men were Secret Service, and thought to herself 'how secret are they?', but the day after the assassination she reported the incident to Dallas' FBI office and to the Dallas Sheriff's office. Neither office took what she said seriously.

After Lee Harvey Oswald was murdered on national television, she was astonished when she saw that the person who killed him was Jack Ruby. She immediately went back to the FBI office and the Sheriff's office and told them that the driver of the green pickup truck was the same man who just shot Lee Harvey Oswald. Again, she wasn't taken seriously. To make matters worse, Julia Ann Mercer wasn't even interviewed by the Warren Commission when they 'investigated' the murder of the President.

If Mercer had seen Ruby an hour before the assassination, one could rightly assume that he was involved with the murder of the President. Why wasn't Miss Mercer interviewed by the Warren Commission? Could it be that what she saw was damaging to the 'lone nut' theory?
3. A few minutes before the assassination, the switchman for the railroad yard was in his glassed-in tower, 14 feet above the yard. The switchman had a bird's eye view of the grassy knoll. He observed two men, whom he did not recognize, standing behind the picket fence on the knoll, watching the approaching motorcade. What was the name of the switchman?

Answer: Lee Bowers

About 10-15 minutes prior the assassination, Lee Bowers, the switchman for the railroad yard, had seen a car, being driven by an unfamiliar man, roaming around the railroad yard behind the grassy knoll. To Bowers, the man driving appeared to be speaking into a hand held walkie talkie. A few minutes before the murder, Bowers, was in his glassed-in tower, 14 feet above the yard. He had a perfect view of the grassy knoll. He observed two men, whom he did not recognize, standing behind the picket fence on the knoll, watching the approaching motorcade.

Soon after, Bowers heard shots and saw a cloud of smoke near the picket fence. He then observed the two men running to a car and driving away, fast. Bowers told the FBI office and the Sheriff's office, but they thought he was mistaken. During the Warren Commission, Bowers testified truthfully to what he saw, but in the actual report, his testimony was not what he had said.

Why was Bowers' testimony fabricated in the Warren Commission Report? What could have been so secretive that our government resorted to distorting a man's honest testimony about what he saw the day one of the greatest leaders of our time was murdered?
4. At the time the President was shot at, a Dallas roofing worker said he saw one man running towards the passenger cars on the railroad siding. The roofing worker said the man who was running had something in his hand. What was the name of the roofing worker?

Answer: J.C. Price

J.C. Price signed an affidavit and testified at the Warren Commission that he saw a man running towards the railroad siding, immediately following the volley of shots that were fired at the passing motorcade. Price said that the man, whom he saw running, was carrying in his hand something that appeared to be a headpiece.

If Lee Harvey Oswald was indeed the 'lone assassin,' what did these witnesses really see? If Oswald was in the Texas Schoolbook Depository he couldn't have been at the picket fence, the railroad yard, or the grassy knoll. Considering the fact that Oswald was only one person, he couldn't have been in more than one place at one time.
5. Some witnesses on this fateful day said that they not only heard shots coming from the picket fence, but that they also saw smoke, from rifles being fired, wafting up through the cluster of trees near the fence. They also had the impression that the assassins had escaped from the grassy knoll after the shooting. One of these witness was a police officer who was escorting the Presidential motorcade. The police officer took off towards the picket fence when he heard the shooting. What was the name of the officer?

Answer: Joseph Smith

Joseph Smith, a police officer with the Dallas police department and a motorcycle escort in the motorcade, ran up the embankment towards the picket fence after the shots rang out. When he got to the area where the smoke from the rifles was clearing, he smelled the odor of gun powder and saw dozens of footprints in the dirt. He was stopped from examining the area further by men who claimed they were Secret Service.

Who were the men who stopped Smith? Considering the fact that all of the Secret Service were accounted for, one could assume that the men who claimed they were Secret Service was part of the coup d'etat that snuffed out the life the President.
6. During the shooting of the President, a man standing under the Triple Underpass was hit in the face by a bullet fragment. The Triple Underpass was about 50-75 feet away from the Texas Schoolbook Depository, and about 20-25 feet away from the President's limousine. What was the name of the man standing under the Underpass?

Answer: James Tague

James Tague was standing under the Triple Underpass, watching the motorcade making its way down Elm Street. Just as the motorcade was half way between the Triple Underpass and the Texas Schoolbook Depository, he heard what he thought was a car backfiring. In that instant something hit him in the face, after it bounced off one of the dividers of the Underpass. The Triple Underpass was about 50-75 feet away from the Texas Schoolbook Depository, and about 20-25 feet away from the President's limousine. Tague was hit by the second bullet that was meant for the President. When Tague heard the shots, he felt they were coming from the Daltex building and the grassy knoll. His testimony, which was in the Warren Commission report, was not at all what he told the Commission. The report said that he was closer to the Texas Schoolbook Depository, when in fact he wasn't.

Since Tague had no reason to lie, and since Oswald was considered by the Marines to be a mediocre shot, how could a bullet, supposedly fired by Oswald, make it past the motorcade to the Triple Underpass where a fragment hit Tague in the face?
7. At the same time as the President was shot, a man was standing on an abutment, with his back facing the picket fence. This man had in his hands a home movie camera and he was filming the Presidential motorcade. To his astonishment he filmed the entire assassination. What is the name of this man?

Answer: Abraham Zapruder

Abraham Zapruder, a dress maker in Dallas, was standing on an abutment with his secretary, filming the motorcade. Even though he heard the shots, Zapruder didn't stop filming. His film was the only one that showed from which direction the bullets actually came.

The 8 mm film clearly shows President Kennedy and Governor Connolly looking around after the first shot, which missed them entirely. The film then shows the President putting his hands to his throat after being shot from the front. Then it shows part of the President's head being blown away after he was hit from behind.

Zapruder knew he caught something of importance, and that same day he had the film developed and had several copies made. He then brought it home and watched it. Zapruder knew that he had to give a copy to the FBI. The FBI showed the film to the Warren Commission, where the Commission said that the film proved that the President was shot from behind. The Commission also said that this validated that Lee Harvey Oswald was the 'lone assassin.'

In 1969, during the State of Louisiana versus Clay Shaw, the Zapruder film was shown to the public for the first time, after being locked in a vault at "Time-Life" magazine by the FBI.

If the Zapruder film actually showed that the President was murdered by a lone assassin, why did our government feel it was necessary to have the film locked away? I believe that the only reason that the film was locked away was because the film actually showed that there was more than one assassin that day in Dallas. I believe that the film showed that there truly was a coup d'etat. The film actually shows that Oswald was telling the truth when he said he was a patsy.
8. The same day that the President was murdered, a man named Jack Martin was pistol whipped in an upstairs office at 531 Lafayette Street in New Orleans. The man who pistol whipped him was a private investigator and a former member of the FBI. What was his name?

Answer: Guy Banister

On the same day that the President was murdered, Jack Martin was pistol whipped with a .357 Magnum by Guy Banister. Banister was a private investigator and was a former member of the FBI. Jack Martin called the police and told them that Banister assaulted him over some telephone bills.

Three years after the assassination, New Orleans District Attorney, Jim Garrison, began looking into the assassination. He interviewed Martin about the pistol whipping on the day of the assassination. Martin told Garrison that he and Banister were drinking that afternoon at Katzenjammer's bar. They then walked back to Banister's office on 531 Lafayette Street. When they got inside the office Banister began having a fit and accusing Martin of going through his personal files. Martin denied doing that and became angry. He then told Banister that he better not talk to him that way because he remembered all the people who were coming and going in the office that summer. Banister flew off the handle and pistol whipped him. When Garrison asked Martin who the people were that were seen coming and going in Banister's office, Martin told him there were a lot Cubans, David Ferrie, and Lee Harvey Oswald. Martin also said that he remembered a tall gray headed man, who seemed to be a socialite, but that he couldn't recall his name.

Martin told Garrison that Ferrie practically lived at Banister's office, helping to train Cubans for an invasion of Cuba. Martin also told Garrison that Oswald usually kept to himself and used one of the building addresses, 544 Camp Street, for a leaflet he was distributing called "Fair Play For Cuba." When Garrison asked Martin what exactly was going on in Banister's office, Martin said he couldn't answer that. And when Garrison asked him what the problem was, Martin said that the problem was that if he kept talking the federal government would be on his back. He told Garrison that if he talked about what went on in Banister's office in the summer of 1963, he would be dead. The same day that Garrison interviewed Martin, he went back to where Banister's office used to be. He saw the address of 531 Lafayette Street, and to his amazement, the building had another address, 544 Camp Street.
9. An hour after the President was murdered, a man drove from New Orleans, LA to Houston, TX. When questioned by New Orleans District Attorney, Jim Garrison, about his possible involvement in the assassination of the President, this man changed his story. What is the name of this man?

Answer: David Ferrie

An hour after John F. Kennedy was murdered, David Ferrie, well known for his Anti-Castro beliefs, drove to Houston, TX. When questioned by Jim Garrison about why he drove to Houston on one of the saddest days in American History, Ferrie said that he decided on a whim to go ice skating. Garrison questioned that statement by asking Ferrie why he wanted to go ice skating during one of the worst thunderstorms in Texas. Ferrie, realizing that he was caught in a lie, changed his story. Ferrie told Garrison that he was going to go ice skating, but decided against it. He said he met up with some friends and that they drove to Galveston to go duck hunting and that some of his friends had bagged a few ducks. Garrison said that he talked to some of Ferrie's friends and found out that none of them had guns. So he asked Ferrie how could they go hunting without guns and bag some ducks? Ferrie then changed his story yet again. Saying that he and his friends intended to go duck hunting, but realized when they got there that they didn't have their guns. Garrison told Ferrie that his story was not believable, he said Ferrie would be held over for questioning by the FBI for possible involvement in the assassination of the President.

The next day, however, Garrison was mortified to find out that the FBI had released Ferrie, saying that there wasn't enough evidence to hold him. It was a well known fact that Ferrie and Banister worked together in training Cuban exiles during the Bay of Pigs, but that all went for naught when Kennedy pulled out of Cuba. Banister and Ferrie continued to train Cuban exiles during the summer of 1963. It was also well known, mostly in the homosexual community, that Ferrie had ideas about how to assassinate the President. During the summer of 1963, Oswald came to know Ferrie, Banister, and Bertrand. When Ferrie would talk to Banister and Bertrand about how to murder the President, Oswald would just listen, not saying a word.

Could the reason for why Oswald didn't say a word was that he knew he would be the patsy? Considering the fact that he never said a word during Ferrie's tirades, Oswald must have known that they would need a scapegoat and he knew that he would it.
10. In 1959 Lee Harvey Oswald had taken a foreign language test while in the Marines. What foreign language was the test on?

Answer: Russian

In 1959, while in the Marines, Lee Harvey Oswald had taken a Russian exam. According to Colonel Allison G. Folsom, Jr., Oswald had done poorly on the exam, getting only two more Russian words right than he got wrong. It is interesting to note that, in 1978 according to James A. Wilcott, a former CIA finance officer, had told the House Select Committee on Assassinations that Oswald was recruited from the military by the CIA. The purpose of Oswald's being recruited by the CIA was so he could be a double agent in the USSR.

When Oswald arrived in Moscow on October 16, 1959, he had a series of contacts with Soviet officials. The soviets were cautious about the American, who didn't just leave his country behind, but also brought the promise of secrets of American anti-aircraft technology. Two weeks after he arrived, Oswald made an appearance at the American Embassy. He handed over his passport and a letter that ended with his allegiance to the USSR.

In February 1961, after a mere 15 months in the USSR, Oswald met Marina Prusakova, who was the niece of a lieutenant colonel in the Soviet Union's domestic intelligence service. Oswald and Marina were married in April 1961, two months after they met. When Oswald decided to return to America, neither the United States government or the Russian government objected to his return or to his bringing Marina with him.

Interestingly, the State Department wholeheartedly approved Oswald's return, claiming that he didn't expatriate himself by his actions upon arriving in Moscow. The State Department authorized the American Embassy in Moscow to lend Oswald money so he could return to America. Such a loan cannot be made unless the recipient's loyalty to the United States has been established beyond any doubt.

Considering Oswald's actions upon arriving in Moscow, how could the United States government claim that he showed his loyalty beyond any doubt? In my opinion the only reason that our government didn't have any doubts was because Oswald was a double agent.
11. On November 22, 1963, at 1:15 P.M., a man, whom some people have identified as Lee Harvey Oswald, was seen walking near Tenth Street and Patton Avenue. At that time an officer called the man over. What happened next was a shock to witnesses. What was the name of the officer?

Answer: J.D. Tippit

At 1:15 pm, a man, whom some people have identified as Lee Harvey Oswald, was walking near Tenth Street and Patton Avenue when a police officer called him over. When the man, somewhat identified as Oswald, walked over to Officer J.D. Tippit, the man shot Tippit three times in the chest, then ran away.

Although some people have identified the man as Oswald, many other witnesses claim that the man was not Oswald. Which is it? Clearly, if Oswald had not murdered Tippit, then who did? Was it all a part of a conspiracy?
12. Around 3:00 pm on that fateful day, Oswald was arrested at a movie theatre, which was located on West Jefferson Street. What was the name of the theatre?

Answer: Texas Theatre

Around 3:00 PM, Oswald was arrested by Dallas policemen while in the Dallas Theatre. As soon as the police approached Oswald, he said "I am not resisting arrest, I am not resisting arrest." By that time, television news crews were waiting outside to film the arrest of the man, whom they believed, was guilty of assassinating the President. Once Oswald got outside he kept saying, "I'm just a patsy." Oswald never stopped proclaiming his innocence.

Was Oswald a patsy like he claimed? Or was he really the assassin?
13. The House Select Committee on Assassinations never verified that Oswald was the assassin, or even one of the gunmen.

Answer: True

The House Select Committee on Assassinations never named, or verified, Oswald as the assassin, or as one of the gunmen. Since the depth of the conspiracy was unknown and never determined. Also, Robert Groden, the Committee's staff photographer and consultant, enhanced a copy of the Zapruder film, and testified that at least nine shots were fired from at least 3 or 4 different locations. He also said that, according the film, none of the shots came from the Texas Schoolbook Depository.

If Groden is to be believed, then how could Oswald physically assassinate Kennedy?
14. Sixty seconds after the assassination, Oswald was observed in the break room of the Texas Schoolbook Depository by a police officer. What was the name of the officer?

Answer: Marion Baker

Sixty seconds after the assassination, motorcycle police officer, Marion Baker, observed Oswald on the second floor of the Depository, in the break room. According to Baker, Oswald had a can of soda in his hand, was relaxed, and was not sweating. Baker's account of seeing Oswald greatly differs from the Warren Commission. The Commission claimed that within that sixty seconds Oswald had descended from the sixth floor by foot, because the elevator was broken that day. They also claimed that Oswald had to find change, operate the machine, and begin drinking the soda before Barker arrived.

If the Commission is to be believed, then Oswald would have had to pass several coworkers on the way down, and he would have been sweating profusely, which he wasn't.
15. There was a photograph that allegedly depicted Oswald standing outside of the Depository when the assassination happened.

Answer: True

Although the United States government wants the American people to so badly believe that Oswald was the 'lone nut', evidence exists that prove otherwise. Oswald was photographed standing outside of the Depository at the same exact time the assassination happened. The photograph was taken by a press photographer named James Altgens. Since this is positive proof that Oswald was not on the sixth floor of the Depository at the time of the assassination, it can only mean that Oswald was a patsy like he claimed.

According to history books, Lee Harvey Oswald was a crazy, lone assassin, who held a grudge against America. But in reality, Lee Harvey Oswald was exactly what he claimed he was, a patsy. He was the scapegoat for a conspiracy to murder the president, and then he was silenced forever by Jack Ruby. Hopefully, one day, the history books will be rewritten.
Source: Author DakotaNorth

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