Lincoln was the first American President to be assassinated.
Without a doubt, the pope is the most protected man in the world and not the president of the United States. This is because since the 1200s no pope has been assassinated but many presidents have been assassinated in recent times.
The CIA was established in 1947, and the only US President assassinated subsequent to the establishment of the CIA, has been President John F. Kennedy, in 1963. If you are asking if the CIA assassinated President Kennedy, that theory has been written in books, and argued with viable, and logical results, since his death. Officially, Lee Harvey Oswald assassinated President Kennedy. From all any subsequent investigation, mainly by the Warren Commission, Oswald was not part of a larger plan or conspiracy, CIA or otherwise. The reactions of those who have read the Warren Commission (98% is now available to the public), including those by Kennedy family members, are skeptical.
24
2001
No because they have too many things in common
No, he has not and many would hope he won't be at all in the future as he has a family and is more than the President running the country and making likable or unlikable decisions.
None, actually. Arthur was originally Vice-President under James Garfield. Garfield was assassinated, and Arthur became President.
one, obama is the first one
No ex-president of the United States has been killed after leaving office. Theodore Roosevelt was hit by a bullet after he was President and was running for another term and was making a speech. The bullet was rather miraculously deflected and did not do him serious damage. So far as I know, that was the only assassination attempt against an ex-president.
Four U. S. Presidents have been assassinated. Five were shot, and at least one other was shot at without being hit, but it proved fatal for Abraham Lincoln in 1865, James A. Garfield in 1881, William McKinley in 1901 and John F. Kennedy in 1963.
Four United States presidents have been assassinated. Their names are Abraham Lincoln, James A. Garfield, William McKinley, and John F. Kennedy.