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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Badge_ManBadge Man - Wikipedia

    Enlargement of the Badge Man from a UPI copy. The Badge Man is a figure that is purportedly present within the Mary Moorman photograph of the assassination of United States president John F. Kennedy in Dealey Plaza on November 22, 1963. Conspiracy theorists have suggested that this figure is a sniper firing a weapon at the president from the ...

  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Mary_MoormanMary Moorman - Wikipedia

    Mary Ann Moorman ( née Boshart; born August 5, 1932) is an American woman who chanced to photograph US President John F. Kennedy a fraction of a second after he was fatally shot in the head in Dallas, Texas. The Badge Man, whom conspiracy theorists claim is one of Kennedy's assassins, is purportedly visible in another of her photographs taken ...

    • Mary Ann Boshart, August 5, 1932 (age 91)
    • .mw-parser-output .marriage-line-margin2px{line-height:0;margin-bottom:-2px}.mw-parser-output .marriage-line-margin3px{line-height:0;margin-bottom:-3px}.mw-parser-output .marriage-display-ws{display:inline;white-space:nowrap}, Donald G. Moorman, ​ ​(m. 1952; div. 1973)​, Gary Krahmer ​(m. 1980)​
  3. Nov 16, 2013 · Transcript. 50 years after the assassination of President John F. Kennedy, we hear from Mary Ann Moorman, an eyewitness at Dealey Plaza who shared her story with documentary filmmaker Alan Govenar ...

  4. Nov 19, 2013 · Woman who took 'grassy knoll' photo recalls moment JFK was shot. When President John F. Kennedy came to Dallas, 31-year-old housewife Mary Ann Moorman and a friend made their way downtown to see ...

  5. Jun 6, 2008 · Description Moorman photo of JFK assassination.jpg. Polaroid photograph of the assassination of President John F. Kennedy, taken an estimated one-sixth of a second after the fatal head shot. (Friday, November 22, 1963, Elm Street, Dealey Plaza, Dallas, Texas) Date. 22 November 1963.

  6. SECRETS OF A HOMICIDE: BADGE MAN. History. On November 22, 1963, 31-year-old Mary Ann MOORMAN and close friend Jean Lollis HILL, 32, stood near the south curb of Elm Street awaiting the arrival of the president's motorcade. [1] MOORMAN had brought her Polaroid Highlander Model 80A camera and took a total of five photographs (each photograph was ...

  7. Jul 4, 2015 · July 4, 2015 James Fetzer blog. by Ralph Cinque (with Jim Fetzer) Among the most important photographs taken during the assassination of JFK in Dealey Plaza on 22 November 1963 was taken by Mary Moorman, who used her Polaroid to snap a photo that has been taken to have occurred a fraction of a second after the shot that entered the vicinity of ...

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