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  1. Dec 19, 2022 · Lee Harvey Oswald talks to the media as he is led down a corridor of the Dallas police station on Nov. 23, 1963. ... Oswald took a military transport flight to Finland, staying at two of the ...

    • Ryan Grim
  2. Lee Harvey Oswald (October 18, 1939 – November 24, 1963) was a U.S. Marine veteran who assassinated John F. Kennedy, the 35th president of the United States, on November 22, 1963. Oswald was placed in juvenile detention at the age of 12 for truancy, during which time he was assessed by a psychiatrist as "emotionally disturbed", due to a lack ...

  3. Aug 15, 2016 · Appendix 14: Analysis of Lee Harvey Oswald's Finances From June 13, 1962, Through November 22, 1963. The following analysis of Lee Harvey Oswald's receipts and expenditures for the period June 13, 1962, through November 22, 1963, contains a complete record of all funds that he and his wife are reported to have received and disbursed from all ...

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  5. Nov 22, 2013 · Gary Mack, the curator of the Sixth Floor Museum in Dealey Plaza, writes for LightBox on how one rare photo, taken by Jim MacCammon of Lee Harvey Oswald's arrest, suggests that the 24-year-old ...

    • He Served in The Marines, Where His Nickname Was “Osvaldovich.”
    • Oswald Attempted Suicide in Russia.
    • He Once Improvised The Role of A Killer.
    • His Alias Was “Alek J. Hidell.”
    • He Was Linked to An Assassination Attempt Before JFK.
    • His Feelings About JFK Were Mixed.
    • He Once Considered Hijacking A Plane to Cuba.
    • Oswald Told Dallas Police That “Nobody’s Going to Shoot at me.”

    Oswald took an early interest in socialism after picking up a leaflet about the coming execution of Ethel and Julius Rosenberg, who had been convicted of spying for Russia. “I was looking for a key to my environment, and then I discovered socialist literature,” Oswald wrote in his diary. “I had to dig for my books in the back of dusty shelves of li...

    In 1959, Oswald travelled to Moscow, in hopes of becoming a Soviet citizen. “I want citizenship because I am a communist and a worker,” he wrote in his request for citizenship. “I have lived in a decadent capitalist society where the workers are slaves.” When his request was denied, Oswald became despondent. “I am shocked!! My dreams!,” he wrote in...

    In 1960, Oswald moved to Minsk and became friends with a group of college students interested in learning English. One of the students, Ernst Titovets, made tape recordings of Oswald in order to study his Southern accent. He had Oswald read passages from Shakespeare and Hemingway, as well as improvise mock dialogues. In one recording, Titovets inte...

    By 1962, Oswald was back in the United States and working in a photo lab in downtown Dallas. Using the lab’s photo equipment, he began to forge a new identity, including a Selective Service card, in the name of “Alek J. Hidell.” Oswald went on to open a post office box, where he would have mail sent under both his birth name, as well as his alias. ...

    Seven months before the Kennedy assassination, Oswald allegedly fired into the home of an ultra-right wing Army general named Edwin Walker. The bullet, which missed Walker, was linked to Oswald’s ammunition after the Kennedy assassination. Gerald Posner, the author of Case Closed recounted what’s known about Oswald’s actions:

    According to an account published in The New York Timesby Paul Gregory, a friend of Oswald’s, Lee and Marina kept a copy of Timemagazine featuring John F. Kennedy as its Man of the Year prominently displayed in their home. “Lee liked Kennedy,” according to Priscilla McMillan, a friend of Oswald’s wife and the author of Marina & Lee. “He liked him i...

    According to McMillan, Oswald wanted to help train Castro’s army in Cuba, but because he could not secure a visa, he was forced to devise an alternative plan. As McMillan told FRONTLINE:

    The day he was killed by Jack Ruby, Oswald dismissed the idea that his life might be in danger. That’s according to James Leavelle, a former member of the Dallas police force who helped escort Oswald from his cell the morning of the shooting. “I put the handcuffs on him,” Leavelle told FRONTLINE, “and in the process of doing that, I more in jest ki...

    • Jason M. Breslow
  6. The next day, he asked Oswald whether he had taken a "pot shot" at Gen. Walker, but Oswald avoided answering. Mr. De Mohrenschildt had probably seen more of Oswald during this time than any- one else, including his _ wife, Marina, and had attempted to piece together what Os- wald had been doing in the Soviet Union.

  7. Nov 22, 2013 · None took him seriously. But the diminutive nineteen-year-old Marine was serious. After obtaining a hardship discharge from the Marines, Lee Harvey Oswald left the United States for the Soviet ...

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