The JFK Assassination and the Mysterious Death of a Reporter Investigating the Crime

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by Bryan S. Jung, PJ Media:

President Donald Trump’s declassification of the assassination files on John F. Kennedy made major headlines recently, but many questions still remain.

One of the remaining unsolved mysteries connected to JFK’s assassination is the strange death of famed investigative journalist Dorothy Kilgallen on Nov. 8, 1965.

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I recently spoke with former defense attorney Mark Shaw, author of “The Reporter Who Knew Too Much,” his book about the mysterious death of Kilgallen, the only reporter to interview Jack Ruby, the mafia-connected nightclub owner who shot Lee Harvey Oswald dead two days after he was accused of killing Kennedy.

I also met with his spokesman, Ian Trottier, who is working on a separate project on former CIA Director John Brennan, whom he accuses of committing treason against the United States.

Trottier spoke last week with Republican Florida Rep. Anna Paulina Luna, the co-chair of the task force on the death of JFK.

He asked Congress to let Shaw testify regarding Kilgallen’s death in connection with JFK, after Oliver Stone’s recent appearance on the Hill.

Kilgallen, who was once described by the New York Post in 1960 as “the most powerful female voice in America,” was also the wife of comedic actor Richard Kollmar.

She was known to the American public as a panelist on CBS’s “What’s My Line” and was a nationally syndicated newspaper columnist in about 200 newspapers, with a weekday radio show with a million regular listeners that lasted for years until her untimely death.

Much of her work involved covering headline criminal trials like the Dr. Sam Shepherd murder case, which later inspired the TV series and the movie “The Fugitive.”

People said that when Kilgallen would report on a trial, it was said that she would cover the story as if she were a prosecutor.

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