Study of JFK assassination bullets honored

Published: Aug. 25, 2008 at 3:29 PM
PRESIDENT JOHN F. KENNEDY, WIFE JACKIE AND GOVERNOR JOHN CONNALLY IN CAR

COLLEGE STATION, Texas, Aug. 25 (UPI) -- Three Texas A&M University faculty members were honored for a study challenging the lone-gunman theory in the assassination of U.S. President John Kennedy.

Statistics Professors Cliff Spiegelman and Simon Seather along with research chemist William James analyzed the makeup of bullets that came from the same production batch as the ones recovered after the 1963 shooting in Dallas.

The trio received the 2008 Statistics in Chemistry Award from the American Statistical Association for their work showing that the metallic compounds of the fatal bullets weren't as unique as originally thought.

"Using new compositional analysis techniques not available in the 1960s, the team determined that the bullet fragments involved in the assassination are not nearly as rare as previously reported, leading to the recommendation that the bullet fragments be reanalyzed," the university said in a written statement.

The Kennedy assassination has been the subject of intensive debate over whether Lee Harvey Oswald acted alone or had accomplices who also fired on the presidential motorcade.

© 2008 United Press International, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Order reprints




Additional News Stories
Your Daily Horoscope (17 min)
The almanac (47 min)
Retailers: As snow falls, so do sales
NBA: Washington 118, Golden State 109
NHL: Vancouver 3, Washington 2
Woman allegedly stole case of Scotch
NBA: Houston 116, Dallas 108 (OT)
fark
Virginia getting slammed with 20 inches
Whiskey hangovers worse than vodka hangovers, still no cure for Whiskey hangovers
If you're traveling through Denver International Airport and find $170,000 laying around, can you...
Cows have taken over Clark County
Shortage of ugly sweaters threatens to ruin ironic hipster parties
Yeah, you probably have mad cow disease