
A novel film that was released that will be auctioned later this month has been released that shows the events after John F. Kennedy was shot in 1963. In the film, the government’s parade could be seen speeding down a Dallas motorway toward a doctor. Dale Carpenter Sr., who was attempting to movie Kennedy and his limousine, captured the images at Lemmon Avenue in Dallas. But when he reached, the limousine now passed. By the time Kennedy was shot, Carpenter had now rushed to Stemmons Freeway. The film remained a household heirloom. The clip passed to Carpenter’s woman, the child, and suddenly the grandson when he passed away in 1991.
What we know about the film
It is the only known movie of Kennedy’s vehicles on the freeway, according to RR Auction, where it will be for sales.
The film killed by Abraham Zapruder, a witness, was the one providing information of the death. What transpired both before and just after the Zapruder movie was shot in this fresh images.
It is longer than a moment and contains nothing that can alter what is already in place.
Only a select few people, besides Carpenter’s community, have so far seen the video.
Clint Hill, the Secret Service agent, who sprang from a vehicle behind Kennedy’s and finally climbed onto the government’s vehicles, also saw the film.
Carpenter’s nephew, James Gates, said the picture was not much talked about in the household though people knew about it.
Gates claimed that when his mother gave him a milk crate with about 30 video clips, including this one, he was in possession of the movie in 2009 or 2010 and that he first saw it. When he first saw the Kennedy film, he was shocked because it did not show Kennedy, but he was shocked by Hill’s heroism.
Kennedy was lying across the backseat with his nose in his wife’s lap while he is not visible in the movie.