Here is the synopsis of our sample research paper on Roscoe White’s Involvement in the Kennedy Assassination
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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 6 page paper argues that Dallas police officer Roscoe White was the man who assassinated President John F. Kennedy. Bibliography lists 3 sources.
Page Count:
6 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_HVrwhite.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
true explanation for the events in Dallas in November, 1963. Discussion This theory says that Roscoe White was the "Grassy Knoll gunman" who shot JFK. Of course, its one of
many conspiracy theories that abound, but it seems to have a lot of supporting evidence. Evidence for White being the shooter comes from no less than his son, Ricky Don
White, who announced in a press conference in 1990 that "his late father, Roscoe Anthony White, was the "Grassy Knoll assassin" (Perry). David B. Perry, whose article is quoted here,
is actually trying to prove that White was not the shooter, but he also provides a lot of useful information as he tries to debunk the White theory. If nothing
else, he shows how complex and multi-layered the theories are. He claims that Ricky White is not telling the truth, but then says that hes still unsure enough about the
entire event to keep investigation (Perry). According to him, there are "several interesting coincidences," including the fact that White and Lee Harvey Oswald were both Marines and traveled on the
same ship; that Roscoe White was a Dallas police officer on the day Kennedy was shot; and "the third Oswald backyard photograph {CE 133-C) was in the possession of Roscoe
Whites wife, Geneva" (Perry). This suggests they at least knew each other, which gives some credence to the story. The evidence that Roscoe White was involved in the assassination is
based largely on testimony from his wife Geneva and son Ricky; since White is dead there is no way to test the accuracy of their statements. However, there seems to
be no real reason why anyone would make such a claim unless it were true. We do know that Roscoe White "joined the Dallas Police Force in September, 1963" and
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