Description
The book "Trauma Room One: The JFK Medical Coverup Exposed" discusses the events surrounding President John F. Kennedy's assassination in 1963. It reveals that the doctors who treated Kennedy at Parkland Hospital agreed not to publish their findings, but in 1990, one of the surgeons, Dr. Charles Crenshaw, decided to speak out. Crenshaw claimed that the wounds on Kennedy's head and throat were caused by bullets from the front, contradicting the official narrative. The book was initially met with criticism, but Crenshaw won a defamation suit against the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA) and new medical discoveries have emerged as a result.
The doctors who tried to save President John F. Kennedy at Parkland Hospital in November of 1963 agreed--either out of respect or fear--not to publish what they had seen, heard, and felt. Then in 1990, one of the Dallas surgeons who worked on JFK in Trauma Room One, Dr. Charles Crenshaw, decided after much deliberation that the American people ought to know the truth. "The wounds to Kennedy's head and throat that I examined were caused by bullets that struck him from the front, not the back, as the public has been led to believe," says Crenshaw. When the first edition of this book was published in 1992, under the title JFK: Conspiracy of Silence, Crenshaw revealed what he never had to opportunity to tell the Warren Commission. In the aftermath, the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA) called Crenshaw's book "a fabrication." But JAMA's claim did not hold up in court and Crenshaw subsequently prevailed in a defamation suit against JAMA. In the process, a number of new medical disclosures and discoveries have emerged on the startling medical cover-up of the JFK assassination.