Speculative Case for JFK's Driver
Speculative Case for JFK's Driver (William Greer) as the Shooter In this purely hypothetical scenario, we entertain the idea that Secret Service driver William Greer was the fatal shooter in Dealey Plaza on November 22, 1963. This is 100% speculation, piecing together anomalies, timing, positioning, and narrative gaps into a "what if" framework. Positioning and Opportunity Greer was in the ideal spot: literally right in front of JFK in the limousine. The driver’s seat put him only a couple feet away from Kennedy, with a clear line to the back seat. Unlike Oswald (supposedly firing from behind and above), Greer had a straight, point-blank or near-point-blank shot. The Zapruder film (in this speculative lens) shows the presidential limousine slowing dramatically or nearly stopping right at the critical moment. If Greer hit the brakes, it would stabilize the car for a precise shot and explain the sudden forward lurch of JFK’s head in the opposite direction some interpret as consistent with a frontal shot. Greer turns his head around toward Kennedy twice in the film. Speculatively, the second turn could be the moment he raises a small weapon (perhaps a concealed derringer or modified pistol) and fires. The motion of his right shoulder or arm could be interpreted by some as consistent with firing rather than just driving. The "Magic Bullet" and Wound Ballistics Flip If the driver fired from the front-right, it could reframe the entire wound pattern. The throat wound (often described as an entrance wound by Parkland doctors) becomes the entry from Greer. The massive head explosion becomes a close-range frontal shot, which would naturally cause the violent backward motion seen in the film (Newton’s laws + hydrostatic shock from the front). This would collapse the need for the "magic bullet" theory entirely. Multiple shots from multiple directions become unnecessary if the driver delivered the kill shot at close range while the car was slowed. Behavioral and Procedural Anomalies Greer was an experienced driver who had driven Kennedy many times. Speculatively, why did he brake/slow in a kill zone instead of accelerating out of it like standard Secret Service protocol? Some interpret this as deliberate — either to facilitate the shot or because he was the shooter and needed the car steady. After the shots, Greer allegedly looks back, then speeds up only after the fatal head shot. In this theory, he’s confirming the kill before flooring it. The immediate Secret Service response looks oddly uncoordinated. The follow-up car agents were slow to react. If the driver himself was involved, it creates built-in confusion and hesitation in the protection detail. Cover-Up Elements (Speculative) The driver’s testimony and the handling of the limousine itself become convenient. The car was quickly shipped off to Detroit for refurbishing, potentially destroying forensic evidence like bullet fragments or blood spatter patterns that might have shown frontal entry. Film alteration theories often tie in here: if the original Zapruder film captured Greer’s arm movement too clearly, selective editing (removing frames or altering the motion) could hide the gun while leaving enough oddity to fuel suspicion for decades. Greer’s background as a Secret Service agent gives him perfect cover — trusted, armed (presumably), and in the most protected position in the motorcade. Who would suspect the driver? Motive (Pure Speculation) He could have been compromised — blackmailed, ideologically turned, or part of a larger faction within the security apparatus that wanted Kennedy removed (Vietnam policy, Federal Reserve, Mafia/CIA overlaps, etc.). As the driver, he had no need for escape or complex logistics. He just had to deliver the shot, keep driving, and let the chaos unfold behind him. This theory turns the assassination from a complicated multi-shooter conspiracy into something elegantly simple: the man with his hands on the wheel and the president’s life in his control decides to end it at the perfect moment. The official lone gunman narrative then becomes the necessary distraction to protect the insider who was sitting in plain sight the whole time. Again, this is pure speculation as requested — stitching together visual anomalies, procedural oddities, and alternative ballistics interpretations into a coherent (if dark) alternative story. Ready for the counter-argument when you want it.