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Dalya Alberge — Mail Online August 28, 2016

Kennedy

The assassination of John F Kennedy in 1963 was an inside job, according to a deathbed confession given to the veteran film director Oliver Stone.

After making his acclaimed film JFK – which was sympathetic to conspiracy theories about the murder – Stone was contacted by a man claiming to have been a former member of the presidential security team.

Dying of cancer, the man wanted to share a secret that he had until then only told his son – that ‘somebody from his own team… had fired on the President’.

He gave only a code name ‘Ron’, in reaching out through a series of mysterious letters before the two men eventually met.

Stone said he was naturally skeptical about such a claim, as there have been so many conspiracy theories since Kennedy was killed by two rifle bullets while travelling in an open limousine through Dallas in November 1963.

Lee Harvey Oswald was accused of shooting the president from the sixth floor of the Texas School Book Depository, only to be shot dead himself two days later by a local nightclub owner with connections to the criminal underworld.

Lee Harvey Oswald

Lee Harvey Oswald

Since then there have been question marks over whether Lee Harvey Oswald fired the shots or – if he did it – who was he working for?

There have also been suggestions that at least one of the fatal shots was fired from a nearby grassy knoll.

Stone, 69, said his doubts about ‘Ron’ were dispelled. As a former marine in Vietnam, the film-maker was convinced by the ‘military jargon’ and intricate details within an account that he describes as ‘plausible’ and ‘very authentic’.

He decided to reveal the man’s confession for the first time to Matt Zoller Seitz, who is the author of a forthcoming book on Stone, the Oscar–winning screenwriter and director whose classics include Platoon, about the trauma of the Vietnam War.

Asked why Stone waited until now, Seitz says: ‘I think it was because he trusted me, and also because both the father and the son have been dead for a while.

‘Nobody has ever heard this story. I’m the first person.’

Stone’s co-operated with the book by making himself available for interview giving Seitz free access to his extensive archive without any editorial control

The book reproduces Stone’s recollections of ‘Ron’. In one passage, he says that he ‘didn’t have any ulterior motives’: ‘He came to me through a series of weird letters through post office boxes.

‘Everything would go to a PO Box, and he’d locate it from offshore, from Bermuda.’

Recalling their meeting in a hotel in Rochester, New York. Stone says: ‘He said he didn’t want money or recognition. He said something like, “I want you to know this is from my conscience”.’

He adds: ‘The scenario he laid out was very practical. It’s the way I would do it, if [I] were going to do something like that.

‘You kill the president, and your cover is security, and if the sniper or snipers who kill the president are hidden in with the guys who are supposed to protect him, guys who have no knowledge of this plot… It makes a lot of sense.

‘And his memory of it was so technical, filled with military jargon, details about radio communications right after the shots.’

Seitz points out that when Stone served in Vietnam, he ‘participated in what he calls coordinated kill zones where you have a rifleman stationed at different locations to catch people in a cross fire in more than one direction’.

The book, titled The Oliver Stone Experience, will be published on September 13 by Abrams books.

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