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But when his car stopped suddenly, the theory holds, Agent George Hickey lost his balance and accidentally discharged his weapon, sending a .223-caliber round rocketing into Kennedy's head —...
Paul Landis, an 88-year-old former Secret Service agent who witnessed the president's death at close range, says in new memoir that he took a bullet from the car after Mr Kennedy was shot, and...
United States Secret Service Special Agent. Assigned to motorcade detail in Dallas, he was following the President's limousine when John F. Kennedy was assassinated on 22 Nov 1963.
George W. Hickey, Jr., Special Agent, White House Detail, White House garage, United States Secret Service. Activities of SA George W. Hickey, Jr. from the time he arrived at Love Airfield, Dallas, Texas, Thursday, November 21, 1963, to the time he departed from the above Love Airfield, Friday, November 22, 1963.
Conducting his own investigation, Donahue eventually decided that the bullet that struck Kennedy in the head had in fact been fired by United States Secret Service Special Agent George Warren Hickey Jr. (March 24, 1923 – February 25, 2005) from an AR-15 rifle carried in the car immediately following the President's vehicle. The proposed ...
JFK: The Smoking Gun claims that George Hickey, a Secret Service man riding in the car behind Kennedy, accidentally fired his weapon on November 22, 1963. It alleges that a cover-up was then carried out to save the blushes of the agency whose main role is to protect serving and former U.S. leaders - leaving the many loose ends that have long ...
Author Bonar Menninger wrote that Hickey, a 40-year-old Secret Service agent assigned to Kennedy’s Dallas motorcade, grabbed an AR-15 assault rifle after Lee Harvey Oswald fired at Kennedy...