John F. Kennedy, 35th president of the United States, is assassinated. Three rifle shots take his life as he drives in an open-top limousine through Dallas, Texas.

He was headed to a luncheon hosted by the Dallas Citizens Council, accompanied by his wife, Jacqueline, the governor of Texas and his wife, who are unharmed.

The Warren Commission report states that the only suspect, former Marine deserter to the USSR Lee H. Oswald, acted alone.

Sixty decades later, several theories remain alive regarding what is considered the most relevant assassination of the 20th century and therefore the most investigated in the history of the United States.

Last 2022, Biden declassified 13,000 more documents about him. But the Mary Ferrell Foundation, a non-profit organization that maintains an online database of the matter, states that some 15,000 documents are still missing and regrets that the papers revealed leave many passages blacked out.

Conspiracy theories feed off each other incessantly. The death of the most charismatic president of the United States remains a mystery.