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The definitive work on the murder of Dallas patrolman J. D. Tippit-killed forty-five minutes after President Kennedy-and its far-reaching implications for the JFK assassination and aftermath Although considered the Rosetta stone of the case against Lee Harvey Oswald, the murder of Dallas police officer J. D. Tippit-killed less than an hour after the assassination of President Kennedy-has proven to be one of the most misunderstood, largely ignored, and often twisted aspects of the Kennedy assassination. For five decades, a community of doubters has contorted official accounts of the shooting to exonerate Oswald. There have been many questions raised about Tippit's death over the past fifty years, but few real attempts to find the answers. Did Oswald murder Tippit? Was Tippit a part of the plot to murder President Kennedy? What really happened on Tenth Street? In With Malice, Dale K. Myers brings thirty-five years of research to this second-by-second account of the murder of Officer Tippit and the frantic manhunt that ended in the arrest of Lee Harvey Oswald. Filling a major void in Kennedy assassination literature, it weaves firsthand accounts, newly released documents, and previously unpublished photographs into a detailed tapestry of facts that lifts the veil on the mystery surrounding this pivotal moment in American history.
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Reviews
"With Malice by Dale Myers has finally cut through the veneer of insinuations and innuendoes applied by the conspiracy buffs for the past thirty odd years. He has cleared up the points of confusion brought on by the rumors and hearsay that had no basis of facts. This book will clear up many questions for the reader about the murder of Officer J.D. Tippit and the assassination of President Kennedy.
James R. Leavelle, former Dallas police homicide detective
"Without a doubt, [With Malice] is one of the best books on the JFK assassination I've ever read. It is thoroughly researched, well-written and filled with many new details-all and all, a very scholarly and extremely interesting work. . . . I expect that this will be the definitive work on the Tippit case . . . definitely a 'must read.'"
Jean Davison, author of Oswald's Game