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Mortal Error : ウィキペディア英語版
Mortal Error

''Mortal Error: The Shot That Killed JFK'' is a 1992 non-fiction book by Bonar Menninger outlining a theory by sharpshooter, gunsmith and ballistics expert Howard Donahue that a Secret Service agent accidentally fired the shot that actually killed President John F. Kennedy. ''Mortal Error'' was published by St Martin's Press in hardback, paperback, and audiobook.
Menninger is also the author of ''And Hell Followed With It: Life and Death in a Kansas Tornado'', which won a Kansas Notable Book Award in 2011.〔ISBN 978-1934572498〕
==Background and overview==
Donahue first became interested in the story of the assassination of John F. Kennedy after being invited to participate in a re-creation of the shooting as one of eleven invited marksmen and sharpshooters.〔 He demonstrated that it would not have been possible for Lee Harvey Oswald to have fired three shots in the time specified by the Warren Commission, and was the only one of the eleven to better the 5.6 second window. However the experience highlighted to Donahue other concerns regarding the Warren report, and in particular the fact that the testimony of ballistics experts seemed to have been completely omitted from the Commission's evidence gathering.
Conducting his own investigation, Donahue eventually decided that the bullet that struck Kennedy in the head had in fact been fired by Secret Service agent George W. Hickey Jr. from an AR-15 rifle carried in the car immediately following the President's vehicle. The series of events is as follows: After the first shot which hit the street was fired, Hickey turns completely around and acquires Oswald on the sixth floor of the school book depository building. His turned head is documented in an AP photograph by James Altgens. Hickey reaches for the AR-15 under the seat, releases the safety and begins to lift the gun. The second shot is fired by Oswald, hitting the president and Texas Governor John Connally. The president's car and the follow-up car containing Hickey suddenly speed up. This is attested to by Secret Service agent Clint Hill. Agent Hickey, who is unstable because he is standing on the cushion of the seat, rather than the floor of the car, begins to fall back due to the acceleration of the vehicle, pulling the trigger of the AR-15. The gun is pointed toward Kennedy at that instant, and the bullet strikes him squarely in the back of the head.
In parallel, he believes Oswald's second shot through Kennedy's neck may have already critically wounded the president before the third shot was fired.
Donahue was encouraged in his investigations by Ralph Reppert, a reporter for the ''Baltimore Sun''. In 1977, Reppert published Donahue's theory in two articles, which appeared on Sunday, May 1, and the following Sunday, with the second article accompanied by an editorial. These two men were keen to collaborate on a book on the subject,〔''...Reppert and Donahue agreed the next logical step would be to write a book. (Mortal Error 1992 paperback edition p. 121)〕 but this was cut short by Reppert's ill health and subsequent death.〔''In theory, at least, there was still the prospect of the book in collaboration with Reppert. In those heady days following the publication of the Sun article, both men had been in full, excited agreement that a book would be the next logical step.'' (Mortal Error 1992 paperback edition p. 188)〕 Donahue later also approached author John Davis in the hope that a book would still be written.〔''Much to Howard's delight, Davis said he was very interested in the theory and the possibility of doing a book.'' (Mortal Error 1992 paperback edition p. 211)〕 The original copyright of Mortal Error read "Copyright 1992 Bonar Menninger and Howard Donahue"〔Mortal Error 1992 paperback edition flyleaf〕 but some later editions did not mention Donahue's copyright. The ''Acknowledgements'' section (dated January 21, 1992) begins "Special thanks to Nick Beltrante for a great news tip, the late Ralph Reppert for showing the way, Howard and Katie Donahue for casting their lot with me...".〔
Donahue's reconstruction of the trajectories of the shots that struck Kennedy and Governor Connally supported the single-bullet theory for the second shot. Donahue decided that the impossible trajectory suggested by the Warren Commission was only necessary because there was an error in their positioning of Connally. He also concluded that this was Oswald's second shot, the first having missed owing to the misalignment of the rifle's telescopic sight but with a ricochet fragment slightly wounding Kennedy, and that Oswald had not fired a third shot, the third cartridge case found at the scene having been a slightly bent and empty one kept in the rifle's chamber.〔''Mortal Error'', ISBN 0-283-06136-7〕
Neither Donahue nor Menninger commented on whether the Warren Commission's key finding, that Oswald acted alone, was correct or not. Menninger notes that the theory is consistent with Oswald being involved in a conspiracy.〔p. 146 ''Of course, Donahue's understanding of the fatal shot in no way precluded the possibility that Oswald was involved in some kind of conspiracy.''〕 The term "cover-up" is mentioned in the book, rather than ''conspiracy''.

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