Roger Stone calls out 'uncanny' parallels between the attempted Trump assassination and successful JFK Assassination 

By 
 December 30, 2024

In an interview with Breitbart News, political adviser Roger Stone shed light on the peculiarities surrounding the two failed assassination attempts on President-elect Donald Trump. 

Stone stated that "the parallels" between those attempts and the assassination of President John F. Kennedy "are uncanny," as Breitbart News reported.

When talking about the impact that the assassination attempt seems to have NOT had, Stone stated that "the problem is, it cycled in and out of the news."

What About the Trump Attempt?

"In 2015, I wrote a book on the assassination of President John F. Kennedy," Stone said in response to a question on whether or not people will ever get answers regarding what occurred in Butler, Pennsylvania, on July 13.. As the title suggests, it is titled "The Man who Killed Kennedy: The Case Against LBJ," and The New York Times has ranked it as a best seller.

But he also said when he looks at details of the two historic events, he said that the similarities are so striking that they become uncanny to reflect on.

Stone's Statement

“You have what appears to be the laydown of the Secret Service. The state, federal, and local police are all on different radio frequencies, so they can’t speak to each other,” Stone told Breitbart News at Turning Point USA’s annual AmericaFest conference last week in Phoenix, Arizona.

“The Secret Service and the Department of Homeland Security know that there’s a man with a gun inside the perimeter for 92 minutes, but they don’t warn the president and he is not evacuated, which would be required under their protocols,” Stone continued.

Stone pointed to some peculiarities, saying, "The government sharpshooter actually gets the man who’s allegedly the shooter in his sights.

"He sees that he has a gun pointed at the president, but he waits until the man gets off eight shots before he shoots and kills him? That makes no sense. Another violation of the rules.”

Logical Conclusion

When faced with the facts, as they've been released to the public this far, Stone said, "I don’t think we’re being told the entire truth.

“I’m sorry, I’m not even certain that the man they accuse of being the shooter is the shooter. He may be. But I refuse to believe he had no confederates.”

“We see him talking on his cellphone in still photographs. Who’s he talking to? Well, Apple won’t turn over his phone records. That’s funny. They turned my phone records over to Robert Mueller without a subpoena. Strange,” Stone added.

What About the Shooter

"The problem is, it cycled in and out of the news," Stone said in response to Breitbart press's reference of the hasty cremation of the remains of suspected presidential assassin Thomas Matthew Crooks.

Along these lines, Stone stated that "the egregious attempt on Trump’s life in West Palm Beach" on September 15 "raises even more questions."

“The man they accuse is supposedly indigent. He’s behind in his child support payments, he’s behind in his rent payments,” Stone pointed out, before asking, “How did he afford to fly to Florida, and to Ukraine, and to Paris, and to London?”

" A free people [claim] their rights, as derived from the laws of nature."
Thomas Jefferson