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In a world-exclusive National ENQUIRER interview, the first nurse to attempt reviving dying President John F. Kennedy at Dallas’ Parkland Hospital has disclosed the existence of a mystery bullet she discovered in the president’s neck — a bullet that disappeared and never showed up in any investigative reports!
Photo credit: Getty Images
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For a half-century, registered nurse Phyllis Hall kept her silence, saying nothing about the bullet and the controversy surrounding the official autopsy. But now her blockbuster accusations reveal that Lee Harvey Oswald could not have acted alone — and that there had to be at least one other assassin firing from in front of Kennedy’s motorcade, most likely from the infamous “grassy knoll.”
Photo credit: Getty Images
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“The autopsy report was faked,” Phyllis told The ENQUIRER. “All you have to do is look at the doctors’ reports to know that something is rotten.” The eyewitness has stepped forward to reveal that the swift removal of the body enabled tampering with the corpse. After valiant attempts to save Kennedy in Parkland’s Trauma Room One failed, the body was rushed to Bethesda Naval Hospital near Washington, D.C., for the autopsy.
Photo credit: Files
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“The body never should have left Parkland before the autopsy was done,” she said. “The body was tampered with — before it got to Bethesda and after. I read some of the reports back then, and I thought, ‘This is not right. This is not how it looked. What about the other bullet? I was there! I saw it! I know it was there, but it just disappeared.’” [WARNING: GRAPHIC IMAGES FOLLOW...]
Photo credit: Files
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Phyllis recalled that President Kennedy was already dead when he arrived at Parkland: “I tried to feel for vital signs, but I could feel no pulses. His eyelids were half-closed and his color was what we refer to as cyanotic — bluish-gray. His pupils were fixed and dilated. I noticed a big exit wound underneath his Adam’s apple near the top of the breast bone."
Photo credit: Files
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"He had a massive wound on the back of the right side of his head, which had to be an exit wound," said Phyllis. "The bullet that exited from the back right side of his skull came somewhere from the front, toward the top of his head. This means that Oswald probably was not the only shooter. The car had already passed the point where he would have had a shot. That shot had to have come from the front … near the grassy knoll!"
Photo credit: Getty Images
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“That whole section of his head was gone," added Phyllis. "There was no brain tissue in the cavity – most of it was on Jackie Kennedy.” She was also shocked to discover a bullet lodged between the president’s earlobe and the top of the shoulder, on Kennedy’s right side. “It was out of its casing, in pristine condition,” she told The ENQUIRER, “almost perpendicular to his body. There was no blood or tissue on it. It was about two inches long and came to a sharp point. It looked just like brushed brass, and it wasn’t like it had hit anything hard.”
Photo credit: Getty Images
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Shockingly, she noted, that bullet didn't resemble the other bullets in the autopsy report. The ones fired by Oswald had rounded tips. She added: “Doris Nelson, who was the operating room supervisor, got a specimen container and took the bullet up to the operating room, to store it with the other specimens. I don’t know what happened to it after that.”
Photo credit: Getty Images
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The nurse's account is backed by neurosurgeon Dr. William Kemp Clark — who attempted to treat Kennedy before seeing the massive head wound. He recalls saying at the time: “My God, the whole right side of his head is shot off. We’ve got nothing to work with. His brains are all over the table.” Dr. Clark sadly declared: “There’s nothing more to be done” — and pronounced the President dead at 1 p.m., just 25 minutes after he was wheeled into the ER.
Photo credit: Getty Images
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Nurse Hall, who did not testify before the Warren Commission, had planned to go to her grave while keeping the secret about the bullet that disappeared. After the assassination, she got threatening letters and phone calls, as did several other members of the hospital staff. “I was scared for my family,” she told The ENQUIRER. “As a nurse, it’s built into you that you don’t talk about your patients or their illnesses.”
Photo credit: Getty Images
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However, after the passage of over 50 years, she felt it was time to go on the record. “I don’t go along with the theory that Oswald was the only one involved in the shooting,” she told The ENQUIRER, recalling how the former Marine (pictured) was assassinated himself by Dallas businessman Jack Ruby. “Lee Harvey was a patsy and a wannabe. He wanted to be something big. I don’t think the bullets all came from the same direction … It was a big, widespread conspiracy!”
Photo credit: Getty Images
In a world-exclusive National ENQUIRER interview, the first nurse to attempt reviving dying President John F. Kennedy at Dallas’ Parkland Hospital has disclosed the existence of a mystery bullet she discovered in the president’s neck — a bullet that disappeared and never showed up in any investigative reports!
Photo credit: Getty Images
For a half-century, registered nurse Phyllis Hall kept her silence, saying nothing about the bullet and the controversy surrounding the official autopsy. But now her blockbuster accusations reveal that Lee Harvey Oswald could not have acted alone — and that there had to be at least one other assassin firing from in front of Kennedy’s motorcade, most likely from the infamous “grassy knoll.”
Photo credit: Getty Images
“The autopsy report was faked,” Phyllis told The ENQUIRER. “All you have to do is look at the doctors’ reports to know that something is rotten.” The eyewitness has stepped forward to reveal that the swift removal of the body enabled tampering with the corpse. After valiant attempts to save Kennedy in Parkland’s Trauma Room One failed, the body was rushed to Bethesda Naval Hospital near Washington, D.C., for the autopsy.
Photo credit: Files
“The body never should have left Parkland before the autopsy was done,” she said. “The body was tampered with — before it got to Bethesda and after. I read some of the reports back then, and I thought, ‘This is not right. This is not how it looked. What about the other bullet? I was there! I saw it! I know it was there, but it just disappeared.’” [WARNING: GRAPHIC IMAGES FOLLOW...]
Photo credit: Files
Phyllis recalled that President Kennedy was already dead when he arrived at Parkland: “I tried to feel for vital signs, but I could feel no pulses. His eyelids were half-closed and his color was what we refer to as cyanotic — bluish-gray. His pupils were fixed and dilated. I noticed a big exit wound underneath his Adam’s apple near the top of the breast bone."
Photo credit: Files
"He had a massive wound on the back of the right side of his head, which had to be an exit wound," said Phyllis. "The bullet that exited from the back right side of his skull came somewhere from the front, toward the top of his head. This means that Oswald probably was not the only shooter. The car had already passed the point where he would have had a shot. That shot had to have come from the front … near the grassy knoll!"
Photo credit: Getty Images
“That whole section of his head was gone," added Phyllis. "There was no brain tissue in the cavity – most of it was on Jackie Kennedy.” She was also shocked to discover a bullet lodged between the president’s earlobe and the top of the shoulder, on Kennedy’s right side. “It was out of its casing, in pristine condition,” she told The ENQUIRER, “almost perpendicular to his body. There was no blood or tissue on it. It was about two inches long and came to a sharp point. It looked just like brushed brass, and it wasn’t like it had hit anything hard.”
Photo credit: Getty Images
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Shockingly, she noted, that bullet didn't resemble the other bullets in the autopsy report. The ones fired by Oswald had rounded tips. She added: “Doris Nelson, who was the operating room supervisor, got a specimen container and took the bullet up to the operating room, to store it with the other specimens. I don’t know what happened to it after that.”
Photo credit: Getty Images
The nurse's account is backed by neurosurgeon Dr. William Kemp Clark — who attempted to treat Kennedy before seeing the massive head wound. He recalls saying at the time: “My God, the whole right side of his head is shot off. We’ve got nothing to work with. His brains are all over the table.” Dr. Clark sadly declared: “There’s nothing more to be done” — and pronounced the President dead at 1 p.m., just 25 minutes after he was wheeled into the ER.
Photo credit: Getty Images
Nurse Hall, who did not testify before the Warren Commission, had planned to go to her grave while keeping the secret about the bullet that disappeared. After the assassination, she got threatening letters and phone calls, as did several other members of the hospital staff. “I was scared for my family,” she told The ENQUIRER. “As a nurse, it’s built into you that you don’t talk about your patients or their illnesses.”
Photo credit: Getty Images
However, after the passage of over 50 years, she felt it was time to go on the record. “I don’t go along with the theory that Oswald was the only one involved in the shooting,” she told The ENQUIRER, recalling how the former Marine (pictured) was assassinated himself by Dallas businessman Jack Ruby. “Lee Harvey was a patsy and a wannabe. He wanted to be something big. I don’t think the bullets all came from the same direction … It was a big, widespread conspiracy!”
Photo credit: Getty Images