The final witness : a Kennedy Secret Service agent breaks his silence after 60 years / Paul Landis.
Material type: TextPublisher: Chicago, Illinois : Chicago Review Press, [2023]Copyright date: �2023Description: xvii, 222 pages : illustrations, portrait ; 24 cmContent type:- text
- unmediated
- volume
- 1641609443
- 9781641609449
- 973.922092 23
- E842.9 .L27 2023
Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
BOOK | Meaford Public Library Non-Fiction | Non-fiction | 973 .922 Landi (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 24163 |
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973 .7 Laxer Staking claims to a continent : John A. Macdonald, Abraham Lincoln, Jefferson Davis, and the making of North America / | 973 .7 Sher The north star : Canada and the Civil War plots against Lincoln / | 973 .711 Shane Flee north : a forgotten hero and the fight for freedom in slavery's borderland / | 973 .922 Landi The final witness : a Kennedy Secret Service agent breaks his silence after 60 years / | 973 .9220 922 Patte The house of Kennedy / | 973 .923 GEO Geo Cache Book | 973 .931 092 Hilto Paris : the memoir / |
Includes index.
Resignation and reflection -- All my eggs -- The Queen city -- Gettysburg and protection -- Secret Service school and White House detail -- My debut -- Ravello, Tialy -- Lace, the Cuban Missile Crisis, and the loss of Patrick -- Greece -- Texas -- Parkland -- Back in Washington, DC -- On the move, life after death, or buried but not forgotten.
Special Agent Paul Landis is in the follow-up car directly behind JFK's and is at the president's limo as soon as it stops at Parkland Memorial Hospital. He is inside Trauma Room #1, where the president is pronounced dead. He is on Air Force One with the president's casket on the flight back to Washington, DC; an eyewitness to Lyndon Johnson taking the oath of office. What he saw is indelibly imprinted upon his psyche. He writes and files his report. And yet Agent Landis is never called to testify to the Warren Commission. The one person who could have supplied key answers is never asked questions. By mid-1964, the nightmares from Dallas remain, and he resigns. It isn't until the fiftieth anniversary that he begins to talk about it, and he reads his first books on the assassination.
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