All the physical evidence (weapons, prints, bullets and fragments) were tied to Oswald and no one else. No evidence was found to support the idea that Oswald needed or had any co-conspirators. He simply appears to have wanted to be famous, and nothing else he'd ever tried, worked. Including, I might add, a previous attempt to assassinate a celebrity (he was not tied to this until after the police found the evidence in his home after JFK's death).
The Warren Commission Report claimed Lee Harvey Oswald shot and killed Dallas Police Officer J. D. Tippit.
The Warren Commission determined that he had fired three shots.
Its 888-page final report was presented to President Johnson on September 24, 1964, and made public three days later. It concluded that Lee Harvey Oswald acted alone in the killing of Kennedy and the wounding of Texas Governor John Connally, and that Jack Ruby acted alone in the murder of Oswald. The Commission's findings have since proven controversial and been both challenged and supported by later studies.
AnswerTo this day there is still an argument as to whether he killed Kennedy alone or was with a group. Nobody knows if anybody sent him because two days after his arrest he was shot by Jack Ruby when he was being moved to the County Jail. Fun Fact: Did you know that the gun that killed Kennedy was bought for around 12 dollars.AnswerTheories that Oswald did not act alone don't really hold up to investigation. Oswald was a man who never fit in; no matter what he tried, he always ended up alienating himself from the "group". The likelihood that he could cooperate or coordinate this activity with another person or persons is very remote. He had the training, the skill, and the means to carry it out all by himself. Most of all, after all of his failures, he had the motivation to make this grand gesture to show the world that he had what it takes.
His gun, his prints on the gun (lifted while he was still alive), fibers from his shirt and a Russian blanket he owned on the gun, the fact that he was left alone on the floor from which the shots were fired, the fact he completely ignored his duties for the day in favor of making a "sniper's nest" in case other people were on the floor, so they couldn't stop him in time. His prints on the sniper's nest area. The fact that he alone escaped the building. The fact that he changed clothes and got his pistol. The fact that he used it to kill a police officer who stopped to question him (odd thing for an innocent person to do!) and then tried to shoot the arresting officers with it. The fact that he said the wrapped package he brought to work was "curtain rods" (which he didn't need) instead of a weapon. If he wasn't planning to do harm with the Carcano, why lie about what it was? The fact that he left his wedding ring, and almost every bit of money he had left, with his wife. He knew he wouldn't be coming home. He kept about as much as you would need to take a bus to Mexico, but Dallas heated up too quick for him to make any real escape to Mexico or anywhere else.
The Warren Commission believed that it was Lee Harvey Oswald.
Lee Harvey Oswald had assassinated John F. Kennedy alone.
According to the investigation done by the Warren Commission, Lee Harvey Oswald assassinated John F Kennedy.
Lee Harvey Oswald shot President Kennedy from the Texas School Book Depository in Dallas, Texas.The Warren Commission, and several subsequent investigations, all concluded that he was assassinated by Lee Harvey Oswald on November 22, 1963.
The Warren Commission Report claimed Lee Harvey Oswald shot and killed Dallas Police Officer J. D. Tippit.
That Lee Harvey Oswald acted alone.
That Lee Harvey Oswald was the lone shooter and that John Connally had been wounded by a magic bulllet.
That was the determination of the Warren Commission.
That Lee Harvey Oswald acted alone.
Lee Harvey Oswald killed JFK alone and that there was no conspiracy.
JFK was killed by the lone gunman Lee Harvey Oswald without help or conspirators.
It was said that Lee Harvey Oswald was the person who planned and did the assassination.