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Two official investigations have concluded that Lee Harvey Oswald was involved as an assassin, with one investigation concluding that Oswald acted alone, and one investigation concluding he acted with, at least, one other person.
Kennedy had chosen to visit Dallas on 22 November for three main reasons: to help raise more Democratic Party presidential campaign fund contributions in advance of the November 1964 presidential election; to begin his quest for re-election; and, because the Kennedy-Johnson ticket had barely won Texas in 1960 he wanted to help mend political fences among several leading Texas Democratic party members who appeared to be fighting politically amongst themselves.
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Main article: Detailed timetable of the assassination all times in CST add 6 hours for UTC all events on November 22 unless otherwise stated
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It was planned that he would go from the Love Field airport in a motorcade through Dealey Plaza to give a speech at the Dallas Trade and Mart in downtown Dallas. The car in which he was traveling was a 1961 Lincoln Continental, open-top, modified limousine. Riding with Kennedy in the limousine were: First Lady of the United States Jacqueline Kennedy; Texas Governor John Connally, Sr., and his wife, Nellie; Secret Service agent and White House Detail Team #3 Assistant in Charge, Roy Kellerman; and Secret Service agent and limousine driver Bill Greer. The limousine was not equipped with a bulletproof top (plans for such a top were presented in October 1963), and no presidential car with a bulletproof top existed in 1963. ( FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover, however, had three bulletproofed cars.)
Throughout Dallas, and especially along the motorcade route, several groups critical of Kennedy expressed their views and distributed a handout flyer. There was a spattering of handmade protest signs held aloft by motorcade viewers. Also, in a November 22 Dallas newspaper there appeared a black-bordered, full-page advertisement paid for by Kennedy critics.