Description:

Kennedy John


Photo of President Kennedy's Death Limousine at Parkland Hospital, Taken Just after His Assassination - White House Photographer Cecil Stoughton's Personally Owned Photo

 

Original, glossy black and white photograph, 10" x 8",  personally owned by Cecil Stoughton, President Kennedy's White House photographer.

 

This photo, taken by Cecil Stoughton, was photographed upon the arrival of the Presidential Limousine to Parkland Hospital just after the assassination of President Kennedy. Kennedy was no longer in the car but was still in the Hospital. This timeline is easily established as the photographer, Cecil Stoughton remained at the hospital until it was determined that Kennedy was officially dead, at which point Stoughton, along with now President Johnson and others left for Air Force One. However during this period while Kennedy was still in the hospital, police officers gathered around the Presidential limousine (which by today's standards would be off limits and considered a crime scene), and were clearly accessing the inside of the rear seats of the Lincoln-Mercury Continental. A bucket is shown placed alongside the car at the foot of the person 'cleaning' the interior.

 

This brings forth numerous questions which all set fuel to fire up conspiracy theories.. Why would anyone be focusing on cleaning the inside of the car while the world was waiting to hear if Kennedy survived? … Why would anyone be allowed to tamper with a crime scene which would have paramount importance in determining the direction of the bullets, the number of bullets, along with a host of other important forensic evidence without the crime scene being quarantined and properly managed?

 

 

Gary Mack, curator of The Sixth Floor Museum at Dealey Plaza and a nationally known authority on the assassination of President John F. Kennedy who once influenced a congressional inquiry on the subject said that while the car was parked outside Parkland Hospital, something strange happened. There were odd reports by some hospital staff of a man in a suit inside the emergency area who asked for a bucket of water and towels “And the implication was that they were going to clean out the car — clean out the crime scene,” he said. The mysterious man was never identified, but Mack said "a bucket was photographed at the left rear door of the limo before being carried toward the emergency entrance." And yet, photographs of the car’s backseat taken by the FBI after the car was flown back to Washington, D.C. reveal it does not appear to have been cleaned. 

 

At the same time, in the hospital, Johnson was surrounded by Secret Service agents, who encouraged him to return to Washington in case he too was targeted for assassination. Johnson wished to wait until he knew of Kennedy's condition; at 1:20 pm he was told Kennedy was dead and left the hospital almost twenty minutes later. It was decided that the new president would leave on the presidential aircraft because it had better communications equipment. Johnson was driven by an unmarked police car to Love Field, and kept below the car's window level throughout the journey. The President waited for Jacqueline Kennedy, who in turn would not leave Dallas without her husband's body, to arrive aboard Air Force One. Kennedy's casket was finally brought to the aircraft, but takeoff was delayed until Johnson took the oath of office. There was concern that since the Secret Service had taken the body of Kennedy from Parkland Hospital against the wishes of the Dallas medical examiner, Earl Rose, who had insisted an autopsy was required, the Dallas Police Department would seek to prevent Air Force One taking off. Assassination of the President was not yet a federal crime

 

As we all know, Kennedy's assassination is rife with swirling confusion. However the overriding confirmed details remain clear - there is enormous contradicting evidence, there are many eye witnesses who were ignored, but perhaps the most odd was that the multiple grand assumptions and determinations of his death simply do not make forensic sense. Perhaps this eerie photograph by Cecil Stoughton shows one of the hidden clues …


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