Key Takeaways
- At least 50 to 100+ witnesses or people connected to the JFK assassination died violently or under suspicious circumstances in the years following — a figure tracked independently by Penn Jones Jr., Jim Marrs, Richard Belzer, and Richard Charnin.[46][49][50][43] Fact
- Deaths cluster conspicuously around key investigation milestones: the Warren Commission (1964), the Garrison investigation (1967), the Church Committee (1975-76), and the House Select Committee on Assassinations (1976-78).[49][40] Strong Evidence
- Several of the most dramatic cases — Dorothy Kilgallen, David Ferrie, George de Mohrenschildt, Sam Giancana, Johnny Roselli — died immediately before planned testimony or publication of revelations.[1][7][36][30][34] Strong Evidence
- The London Sunday Times actuarial calculation of "100,000 trillion to 1" odds was dramatic but methodologically flawed, and was retracted by the newspaper itself. The HSCA rejected it as invalid.[41][42] Fact
- Skeptics argue persuasively that selection bias inflates the apparent pattern: thousands of people had some connection to the case, and some deaths over 15+ years are statistically expected. Strong Evidence
- The strongest counterpoint to the skeptics: it is the timing and specific identities of the dead that disturb — not merely the raw count. The people who died were disproportionately those about to talk. Theoretical
- In March 2025, Trump ordered full release of remaining classified JFK records (63,400+ pages).[58][59] While no smoking gun on witness deaths emerged, the release reignited public scrutiny. Fact
In the years after November 22, 1963, an unsettling pattern emerged. People who knew things — who saw things, who investigated things, who were about to testify about things — began to die. Some violently. Some conveniently. Some in ways that strained the word "coincidence" past its breaking point.
This is not, on its face, proof of conspiracy. Thousands of people were connected to the assassination or its investigation, and over the span of two decades, some percentage of any large group will die by violence, accident, or disease. The question is whether the specific people who died, at the specific times they died, exceed what chance would predict — and whether the circumstances of individual deaths warrant deeper scrutiny than they received.
What follows is a case-by-case examination of the most significant deaths, the statistical arguments that have been marshaled on both sides, and the researchers who have spent decades tracking a pattern that may be the most disturbing thread in the entire JFK story.
The Wall: Witness Profiles
Dorothy Kilgallen
Journalist, TV personality, JFK investigatorSuspicious Death
Dorothy Kilgallen was one of the most famous journalists in America — a syndicated columnist for the New York Journal-American, a panelist on the hit CBS game show What's My Line?, and a relentless investigative reporter who had covered everything from the Lindbergh baby trial to the Sam Sheppard case.[1][3] Fact
After the Kennedy assassination, Kilgallen became fixated on the case. She attended and covered Jack Ruby's murder trial in Dallas in March 1964 — and accomplished something no other journalist managed: a private interview with Ruby[2][1] in a small room adjacent to Judge Joe B. Brown's bench, arranged through Ruby's attorney Joe Tonahill. Fact
"That story isn't going to die as long as there's a living reporter around. I'm going to find out who killed President Kennedy." — Dorothy Kilgallen, quoted to friends after the Ruby interview
Kilgallen spoke to friends about the interview but never published its contents — not a single reference appeared in her prolific output. She began assembling a file on the assassination, telling friends and associates she was about to "blow the JFK case wide open."[4][2] Strong Evidence
- Found dead in her Manhattan townhouse on November 8, 1965
- Medical examiner ruled death due to "a combination of moderate quantities of alcohol and barbiturates"[3]
- She was found fully dressed and sitting upright in a bed she never used, in a room she rarely entered — not her own bedroom
- Her JFK investigation file — including whatever Ruby told her — has never been found[4][6]
- No meaningful police investigation into the circumstances was conducted
Author Mark Shaw, in The Reporter Who Knew Too Much (2016)[4] and Denial of Justice (2019),[5] built a detailed case that Kilgallen was murdered to prevent publication of her JFK findings. Shaw identified mob boss Carlos Marcello as a prime suspect, noting that in a 1985 prison confession (audio-taped by an FBI informant), Marcello admitted involvement in the Kennedy assassination.[66] FBI files released in early 2025 provided additional context[59] for Marcello's motive: revenge against the Kennedy brothers who had deported him. Emerging
David Ferrie
Pilot, Civil Air Patrol leader, anti-Castro operativeNatural Causes / Disputed
David William Ferrie was an eccentric and brilliant figure — a licensed pilot, amateur cancer researcher, self-taught philosopher, and fervent anti-Castro activist based in New Orleans. He commanded a Civil Air Patrol squadron in the mid-1950s, and a 15-year-old Lee Harvey Oswald joined that same unit in July 1955. A photograph uncovered by PBS Frontline in 1993 placed both men at the same CAP encampment.[11][7] Fact
Ferrie was connected to virtually every strand of the JFK conspiracy web: he worked out of Guy Banister's office at 531 Lafayette Street[8][17] (connected to 544 Camp Street, where Oswald's pro-Cuba leaflets were stamped); he was linked to mob boss Carlos Marcello, reportedly flying Marcello back from Guatemala after Robert Kennedy's deportation order[10]; and he was deeply embedded in anti-Castro exile operations. Strong Evidence
- Found dead in his apartment on February 22, 1967 — less than a week after the New Orleans States-Item publicly revealed DA Jim Garrison's investigation and named Ferrie as a target
- Coroner ruled cause of death: massive cerebral hemorrhage from a ruptured congenital berry aneurysm[7][9]
- Two unsigned, undated, typed suicide notes were found[9] — one a philosophical screed ("To leave this life is, for me, a sweet prospect"), the other bequeathing possessions to friend Al Beauboeuf
- Garrison publicly commented: "I suppose it could just be a weird coincidence that the night Ferrie penned two suicide notes, he died of natural causes"
"To leave this life is, for me, a sweet prospect. I find nothing in it that is desirable and on the other hand, everything that is loathsome." — First typed note found in David Ferrie's apartment, February 22, 1967
The Eladio del Valle parallel: On the same day Ferrie was found dead in New Orleans, Cuban exile Eladio del Valle — a Ferrie associate and figure in Garrison's investigation — was found murdered in Miami, shot through the heart at point-blank range.[12][13] His murder has never been solved. Garrison believed del Valle's skull had been split with a hatchet, though this claim originated from a National Enquirer article and was not confirmed by the autopsy. Speculative
Guy Banister
Ex-FBI, private investigator, 544 Camp StreetHeart Attack — Files Vanished
William Guy Banister was a former FBI Special Agent in Charge who ran a private detective agency at 531 Lafayette Street, New Orleans — a building whose side entrance bore the address 544 Camp Street, the address stamped on Lee Harvey Oswald's Fair Play for Cuba Committee leaflets in the summer of 1963.[14][17] This placed Oswald's nominally pro-Castro activities in the same building as one of the most virulently anti-Castro operatives in the city. Fact
On the afternoon of November 22, 1963, Banister and associate Jack Martin were drinking at the Katzenjammer Bar next to the office. During a subsequent argument, Banister drew his .357 Magnum and pistol-whipped Martin.[15][64] According to Martin's later testimony to the HSCA, just before the assault he had asked Banister: "What are you going to do — kill me like you all did Kennedy?" Strong Evidence
- Died June 6, 1964, officially of a heart attack — six months after the assassination
- His extensive files were scattered among various associates after his death
- His widow sold some files to the Louisiana State Police[16]
- The HSCA later reviewed surviving Banister files and found Oswald's name associated with the FPCC[61], but no file devoted solely to Oswald
- The full scope of what was in the files — and what may have been removed — remains unknown
Lee Bowers Jr.
Railroad tower operator, Dealey Plaza eyewitnessSingle-Car Accident
Lee Edward Bowers Jr. had one of the most significant vantage points in Dealey Plaza on November 22, 1963. He was operating the Union Terminal Company's two-story railroad interlocking tower[18][20], approximately 120 yards north of the grassy knoll, with an unobstructed view of the parking lot, the stockade fence, and the area behind the concrete pergola. Fact
In his Warren Commission testimony (April 2, 1964, to counsel Joseph A. Ball)[20], Bowers described three suspicious vehicles that entered the railroad parking area in the 30 minutes before the shooting — including cars with out-of-state plates and Goldwater bumper stickers that appeared to be circling the area. He identified two men standing near the stockade fence at the top of the knoll: one middle-aged, heavy-set, in a white shirt, and another younger, in a plaid shirt or jacket. Fact
At the moment of the shooting, Bowers testified to a "commotion" near the fence where the two men stood. In a later filmed interview with attorney Mark Lane, Bowers elaborated that this may have been "a flash of light or smoke"[21][19] — a detail he had not included in his Warren Commission deposition. Strong Evidence
- Died August 9, 1966, when his car left the road and struck a concrete bridge abutment near Midlothian, Texas[18][19]
- Single-car accident on a clear, sunny day — no obvious cause
- A doctor who arrived at the scene reportedly said Bowers appeared to be in "a strange sort of shock"
- No autopsy was performed[21]
- His body was cremated shortly afterward
"At the time of the shooting there seemed to be some commotion... something out of the ordinary, a sort of milling around... which attracted my eye for some reason which I could not identify." — Lee Bowers, Warren Commission testimony, April 2, 1964
Roger Craig
Dallas County Deputy Sheriff, Dealey Plaza witnessRuled Suicide
Roger Dean Craig was named Dallas County Sheriff's Department "Officer of the Year" in 1960. On November 22, 1963, he was in Dealey Plaza and became one of the most controversial witnesses in the entire case. Craig testified that he saw Lee Harvey Oswald run from the Texas School Book Depository and get into a waiting light-green Nash Rambler station wagon[22][24] — a claim that directly contradicted the official timeline, which had Oswald walking east on Elm Street and boarding a bus. Fact
Craig also claimed he later confronted Oswald in Captain Will Fritz's office, and that Oswald acknowledged the Rambler, saying "That station wagon belongs to Mrs. Paine — don't try to tie her into this." Fritz and others denied this exchange took place. The Warren Commission explicitly rejected Craig's testimony: "The Commission could not accept important elements of Craig's testimony."[22] Fact
- Fired from the sheriff's department in 1967 after being caught speaking to reporters about the assassination[23][63]
- Shot at by an unknown assailant — the bullet grazed his head
- His car was forced off a mountain road in 1973, causing permanent back injury
- On another occasion, his car was bombed
- His marriage collapsed in 1973 as a consequence of the continuing harassment
Craig documented his experiences in a 1971 manuscript titled When They Kill a President[24], which was not published during his lifetime. He died on May 15, 1975, from a gunshot wound ruled self-inflicted. Supporters note the years of documented harassment; skeptics note that Craig's increasingly embellished claims damaged his credibility and that personal and financial difficulties provided motive for suicide independent of any conspiracy. Speculative
Mary Pinchot Meyer
Artist, JFK mistress, ex-wife of CIA officer Cord MeyerMurdered — Unsolved
Mary Pinchot Meyer occupied a unique intersection: she was the ex-wife of Cord Meyer, one of the CIA's top clandestine officers under Allen Dulles[25][26], and she was simultaneously engaged in an intimate relationship with President Kennedy that lasted from October 1961 until his assassination. They met two or three times per week in the White House during this period. Fact
On October 12, 1964 — less than a year after JFK's murder — Meyer was shot execution-style while walking on the towpath along the Chesapeake & Ohio Canal in Georgetown. She was struck by two bullets: one in the head, one in the shoulder blade, at close range. Fact
- Meyer kept a diary that reportedly detailed her relationship with Kennedy
- Friend Anne Truitt had called Ben Bradlee (Meyer's brother-in-law, later Washington Post editor) to alert him about the diary
- When Bradlee and his wife went to Meyer's art studio the morning after her death, they found CIA counterintelligence chief James Jesus Angleton already there, picking the lock with specialized tools[27][29]
- The diary was allegedly removed and burned — though accounts differ on who did it and when
- The diary has never resurfaced in nearly 60 years
The trial: Ray Crump Jr., an African-American day laborer, was arrested and charged with Meyer's murder. He was acquitted on July 29, 1965[25][28], after defense attorney Dovey Johnson Roundtree exposed the prosecution's case as entirely circumstantial — no murder weapon, no ballistics match, no blood, hair, fiber, or other forensic evidence linking Crump to the crime. The murder remains officially unsolved. Fact
Peter Janney, son of a CIA officer who knew the Meyer family, published Mary's Mosaic (2012)[29], arguing that Meyer was killed by a CIA contract operative because of what she knew about Kennedy's assassination and his reported move toward peace with the Soviet Union and Cuba. Speculative
Sam Giancana
Chicago Mafia boss, CIA-Mafia Castro assassination plotsMurdered
Salvatore "Sam" Giancana was the boss of the Chicago Outfit and a central figure in the CIA's plots to assassinate Fidel Castro — Operation MONGOOSE and related programs. In September 1960, the CIA recruited ex-FBI agent Robert Maheu to approach mob figures for help killing Castro.[30][31] Maheu contacted Johnny Roselli, who introduced him to "Sam Gold" (Giancana) and "Joe" (Tampa boss Santo Trafficante Jr.). Roselli refused payment; the operation proceeded through 1962-63. Fact
Giancana was also connected to the Kennedys through Judith Campbell Exner[67], who claimed to have been the simultaneous mistress of both Giancana and JFK, and to have carried communications between them. Strong Evidence
- Murdered June 19, 1975, in the basement of his home in Oak Park, Illinois
- Shot once in the back of the head, then six more times under the chin with a .22-caliber pistol equipped with a silencer[32][33] — a classic mob "message" killing
- He was cooking sausage and peppers at the time
- The murder occurred days before he was scheduled to testify before Senator Frank Church's Select Committee[32][33] on Intelligence Activities about the CIA-Mafia Castro plots
"I always felt very strongly that the subpoena requiring Sam to appear before the committee was the death warrant that led to his murder." — Antoinette Giancana, Sam's daughter
The leading theory is that Giancana was killed by associates — possibly on orders from Santo Trafficante Jr. — who feared he would reveal details of the CIA-Mafia collaboration before the Church Committee. His murder was never solved. Strong Evidence
Johnny Roselli
Mob figure, CIA liaison for Castro assassination plotsMurdered
John "Handsome Johnny" Roselli (born Filippo Sacco) was the mob's primary liaison with the CIA in the Castro assassination plots. He was the go-between who connected CIA officer William Harvey and Robert Maheu to Giancana and Trafficante.[34][35] Unlike Giancana, Roselli did testify — first before the Church Committee in 1975 about the Castro plots, and then on April 23, 1976[34], before the same committee specifically about the JFK assassination. Fact
Roselli made explosive claims: he told journalist Jack Anderson that a CIA hit team sent to Cuba had been "turned" by Castro and then used to assassinate Kennedy. He also reportedly said that when Oswald was arrested, "underworld conspirators feared he would disclose information, so Jack Ruby was ordered to eliminate Oswald." Speculative
- Disappeared July 28, 1976, after leaving his Florida home reportedly to play golf
- Ten days later, his body was found floating in a 55-gallon oil drum in Dumfoundling Bay, near Miami
- He had been strangled, shot, and his legs sawed off to fit the body into the drum[34][35]
- The murder occurred three months after his JFK assassination testimony — the Committee had wanted to recall him for further questioning
At the behest of Senate members, Attorney General Edward Levi ordered the FBI to investigate whether Roselli's testimony had led to his murder.[34] No definitive conclusion was reached. Fact
George de Mohrenschildt
Russian emigre, petroleum geologist, Oswald's "handler"Shotgun — Ruled Suicide
George Sergius de Mohrenschildt was a White Russian aristocratic emigre, petroleum geologist, university professor, and one of the most puzzling figures in the entire JFK story. He was a sophisticated, globe-trotting socialite who moved in elite Dallas circles — and yet he became Lee Harvey Oswald's closest friend and mentor during 1962-63[36][37], an improbable relationship given the vast gulf in their social positions. Fact
The question that has haunted researchers for decades: was de Mohrenschildt a CIA asset who was directed to befriend Oswald? In an interview with author Edward Jay Epstein on the day of his death, de Mohrenschildt claimed that in 1962, Dallas CIA operative J. Walton Moore[36][65] and an associate had given him Oswald's address in Fort Worth and "suggested that de Mohrenschildt might like to meet him." Strong Evidence
- Found dead from a shotgun blast to the head on March 29, 1977[36][38], at a home in Manalapan, Florida
- Ruled suicide by the coroner
- On that same day, HSCA investigator Gaeton Fonzi had left a business card at de Mohrenschildt's residence[39][60], requesting an interview
- Also on that same day, de Mohrenschildt was giving his interview to Epstein in which he made the CIA-directed-contact claim
- The HSCA considered him a "crucial witness"
Dutch journalist Willem Oltmans testified that de Mohrenschildt had told him: "Oswald acted at his [de Mohrenschildt's] instructions and that he knew Oswald was going to kill Kennedy." This dramatic claim has been treated with skepticism by many researchers, as de Mohrenschildt had been in deteriorating mental health. Speculative
"I am a patsy. I am a patsy." — George de Mohrenschildt, reportedly to friends in his final weeks, echoing Oswald's famous claim
The Wider Pattern: Additional Notable Deaths
The nine profiles above represent the most thoroughly documented cases, but they are far from the only suspicious deaths. As investigation periods heated up, the body count rose. The following deaths occurred during the critical HSCA investigation period (1975-1978):
The clustering is unmistakable: within a roughly two-year window centered on the HSCA investigation, multiple potential witnesses with knowledge of CIA-Mafia-Cuban exile networks died violently. Whether this clustering reflects a "cleanup operation" or the general violence of the worlds these men inhabited is the central interpretive question. Theoretical
The Numbers Game: Statistical Analysis
The London Sunday Times Actuarial Calculation
In February 1967, the London Sunday Times reported that an actuary had calculated the odds of 18 material witnesses[41] to the JFK assassination dying within three years as approximately 100,000 trillion to 1. This staggering figure was featured in the 1973 film Executive Action and became one of the most widely cited statistics in JFK conspiracy literature. Fact
However, the calculation was fatally flawed — and the Sunday Times itself acknowledged this. In a letter to the HSCA in 1977, the newspaper's legal manager Anthony Whitaker wrote:[41][42]
"Our piece about the odds against the deaths of the Kennedy witnesses was, I regret to say, based on a careless journalistic mistake and should not have been published. This was realized by The Sunday Times editorial staff after the first edition — the one which goes to the United States — had gone out, and later editions were amended. There was no question of our actuary having got his answer wrong: it was simply that we asked him the wrong question." — Anthony Whitaker, London Sunday Times Legal Manager, letter to HSCA, 1977
The fundamental problem: the actuary was given a pre-selected list of deaths and asked to calculate the odds. This is equivalent to dealing a poker hand, noting it's a specific combination, and then calculating the odds of that exact hand — which will always be astronomically unlikely. The question should have been: given the total population of people connected to the assassination, how many deaths would you expect? Fact
The HSCA's Response
HSCA statistical consultant Jacqueline Hess testified in 1978 that the actuarial calculation was "invalid"[42] because of the "impossibility" of defining the "universe" of material witnesses. How many people were connected to the assassination? 500? 5,000? 50,000? The answer dramatically changes the expected death rate. The committee's chief of research concluded: "The available evidence does not establish anything about the nature of these deaths which would indicate that the deaths were in some manner, either direct or peripheral, caused by the assassination." Fact
The Statistical Debate — By the Numbers
Richard Charnin's Probability Analysis
Mathematician Richard Charnin, holding three degrees in applied mathematics[43][44], attempted to place the witness death question on firmer statistical ground using Poisson distribution analysis — a standard statistical tool for calculating the probability of rare events in large populations. Emerging
Charnin's methodology: given N=1,400 Warren Commission witnesses, a 15-year period, and the national unnatural mortality rate (R=0.000127 per year), the expected number of unnatural deaths would be approximately 2.66. The actual number, per his count, was 96. The Poisson probability of this occurring by chance: approximately 1 in 1061[43] — a number so large as to be effectively zero. Emerging
The Skeptical Counter-Argument
The statistical analyses, however dramatic, face serious methodological objections:
- Selection bias: Lists of "suspicious deaths" are compiled after the fact, selecting for suspicious-looking cases from a vast pool. This is like searching all lottery winners for unusual coincidences — you'll always find them.
- The undefined universe: "JFK assassination witness" has no clear boundary. Jim Marrs's list drew from roughly 10,000 people connected in even tangential ways to the case. From a pool that large, dozens of deaths over 15 years are expected.
- Misclassification: Many people on Marrs's list died of natural causes — e.g., Secret Service agent Roy Kellerman, who died of heart failure at 69 in 1984. Over half the deaths on the major lists were from natural causes.
- Confirmation bias: Researchers remember the deaths that fit the pattern and ignore the many witnesses who lived full lives. Abraham Zapruder, Jesse Curry, Ruth Paine, Marina Oswald, Buell Wesley Frazier, and hundreds of other significant witnesses lived decades more.
- Occupational hazard: Many of the most dramatic deaths were of mob figures (Giancana, Roselli, Nicoletti, Hoffa). Mob figures die violently at far higher rates than the general population — this is not evidence of JFK-related assassination but of ordinary organized crime violence.
What the Pattern Means — Or Doesn't
The honest assessment lands somewhere between the conspiracy maximalists and the dismissive skeptics. The raw statistical arguments are weaker than they appear — plagued by selection bias and definitional problems that likely cannot be resolved. But the individual cases, examined on their own terms, present a pattern that statistics alone cannot capture. Theoretical
Consider the timing argument. It is not merely that JFK-connected people died; it is when they died:
- Dorothy Kilgallen — days after telling friends she would "blow the case wide open"
- David Ferrie — days after being publicly named by Garrison
- Sam Giancana — days before Church Committee testimony
- Johnny Roselli — months after JFK testimony, weeks before recall
- George de Mohrenschildt — the same day an HSCA investigator came to his door
- Carlos Prio — while wanted by the HSCA for questioning
- Charles Nicoletti — shortly before he could have been called by the HSCA
Each individual case can be explained away. Ferrie had a brain aneurysm. Craig was depressed. De Mohrenschildt was mentally unstable. Giancana and Roselli were mob figures who made enemies. But the cumulative effect — person after person dying at precisely the moment they became dangerous to someone — creates a pattern that demands explanation beyond coincidence, even if it cannot be proven as conspiracy.[45][57] Theoretical
"Once is happenstance. Twice is coincidence. Three times is enemy action." — Ian Fleming, Goldfinger (1959) — widely quoted in JFK assassination literature
The most defensible position may be this: the statistical case, taken globally, is vulnerable to valid methodological critique. But a subset of these deaths — perhaps 8 to 12 of the most dramatic cases — exhibit timing, method, and circumstance patterns that are not adequately explained by coincidence, natural causes, or the ordinary hazards of mob life. These cases, rather than the inflated lists of 100+ names, represent the genuine evidentiary core of the "mysterious deaths" question. Theoretical
The 2025 Document Release
In March 2025, President Trump ordered the release of all remaining classified JFK assassination records[58][59] — 2,182 documents comprising approximately 63,400 pages uploaded to the National Archives website. While no smoking gun regarding witness deaths emerged from this release, the documents provided additional context about CIA operations, Cuban exile networks, and intelligence community awareness of key figures. Researchers continue to analyze the trove. Fact
The Trackers: Those Who Documented the Pattern
Penn Jones Jr. and the Midlothian Mirror
William Penn Jones Jr. (1914-1998) was a small-town Texas newspaper editor who became one of the earliest and most persistent trackers of JFK witness deaths. From his weekly paper, the Midlothian Mirror (which he purchased in 1946 for $4,000), Jones documented what would eventually grow to 188 suspicious deaths.[46][48] His four-volume self-published series Forgive My Grief (1966-74) — the title drawn from Tennyson's In Memoriam — is a raw, accumulating chronicle of names, dates, and circumstances that reads less like journalism than like a body count. Fact
In the 1980s, Jones co-edited The Continuing Inquiry newsletter with Gary Mack of the Sixth Floor Museum at Dealey Plaza. Jones's methods were not rigorous by academic standards — he tended to include anyone with even a tangential connection — but his relentless documentation created the evidentiary base on which later researchers built.
Jim Marrs and Crossfire
Jim Marrs (1943-2017), a Texas journalist and professor, compiled the most widely known list of suspicious deaths in his 1989 book Crossfire: The Plot That Killed Kennedy[49], which became a New York Times bestseller and served as a primary source for Oliver Stone's 1991 film JFK. Marrs documented 103 deaths between 1963 and 1976[49][47], observing that they clustered around four investigation periods: the Warren Commission, the Garrison investigation, the Church Committee, and the HSCA. Fact
"These deaths certainly would have been convenient for anyone not wishing the truth of the JFK assassination to become public." — Jim Marrs, Crossfire: The Plot That Killed Kennedy (1989)
Belzer and Wayne: Hit List
Actor/comedian Richard Belzer (best known as Detective John Munch on Law & Order: SVU) and researcher David Wayne published Hit List[50]: An In-Depth Investigation into the Mysterious Deaths of Witnesses to the JFK Assassination (2013), which became a New York Times bestseller. The book profiled 50 deaths in individual chapters, including Kilgallen, Banister, del Valle, Ferrie, Giancana, Roselli, de Mohrenschildt, Hoffa, and others. Fact
Key Researchers
Penn Jones Jr.
Midlothian Mirror, Independent
Pioneer tracker of JFK witness deaths. Published Forgive My Grief (4 volumes, 1966-74). Documented ~188 suspicious deaths. First to systematically identify the pattern.
Jim Marrs
University of Texas at Arlington (journalism professor)
Compiled 103-death list in Crossfire (1989). NY Times bestseller, basis for Oliver Stone's JFK. Grouped deaths by investigation periods.
Mark Shaw
Independent author, former defense attorney
Leading authority on Dorothy Kilgallen's death. Published The Reporter Who Knew Too Much (2016), Denial of Justice (2019), and Abuse of Power (2025). Identified Marcello connection.
Richard Charnin
Independent quantitative analyst
Applied Poisson distribution analysis to JFK witness deaths. Published Reclaiming Science: The JFK Conspiracy (2014). Three degrees in applied mathematics.
Richard Belzer & David Wayne
Independent researchers
Co-authored Hit List (2013) and Dead Wrong (2012). Profiled 50 individual deaths with detailed case assessments. NY Times bestseller.
Peter Janney
Independent researcher (son of CIA officer)
Authored Mary's Mosaic (2012) investigating Mary Pinchot Meyer's murder. Argued CIA involvement based on personal family connections to the intelligence community.
Gaeton Fonzi
House Select Committee on Assassinations (investigator)
HSCA investigator whose business card was found at de Mohrenschildt's on the day of his death. Later published The Last Investigation (1993) documenting the HSCA's work and its limitations.
Jacqueline Hess
HSCA Chief of Research
Conducted the HSCA's formal statistical assessment of witness deaths. Testified that the London Sunday Times calculation was "invalid" and that the "universe" of witnesses was undefinable.
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JFK Assassination Investigation — Report 07 of 15 — Generated 2026-04-05
Wave 2.2 — Key Witnesses & Mysterious Deaths