John Wilkes Booth 'got away with assassinating Abraham Lincoln by evading capture and living nearly four decades under assumed identities'
By Ariel Zilber
Daily Mail
April 28, 2019
John Wilkes Booth may have gotten away with the assassination of President Abraham Lincoln.
New evidence uncovered by facial recognition technology appears to show that Booth lived for decades under an assumed identity after he shot Lincoln at Ford’s Theatre in Washington, D.C. on April 14, 1865.
The conventional historiography holds that Booth was shot dead by Union soldiers five days after the assassination inside a barn on a farm in Virginia.
But an investigator with the Discovery Channel series Mummies Unwrapped says that modern-day face recognition technology shows that Booth’s face matched with that of two other men - John St. Helen and David E. George.
The researchers ran the images of St. Helen, George, and Booth through a computer and found that there was a strong possibility that these three individuals were the same man.
While Booth is purported to have died in 1865, the image of St. Helen was from 1877. The picture used of George was from 1902.
St. Helen was considered a near perfect match.
The facial recognition software analyzes features like the spaces between the eyes, jaw lines, and the shapes of the noses and cheek bones.
Just before St. Helen is purported to have died in 1877, he told Finis L. Bates, an acquaintance of his in Granbury, Texas: ‘I am dying. My name is John Wilkes Booth, and I am the assassin of President Lincoln.’
Bates, the grandfather of Academy Award-winning actress Kathy Bates, said that St. Helen told him that Lincoln’s assassination was masterminded by Vice President Andrew Johnson.
Johnson then allegedly gave him a password allowing him to escape the manhunt that ensued, according to the History Channel.
St. Helen said that the man who was killed in the Virginia barn was passed off as the assassin so that the soldiers who tracked him down could claim the reward.
The man who was buried in the Booth family plot in Baltimore is innocent, while the real John Wilkes Booth used aliases to live another 38 years.
In 1903, a man named David E. George committed suicide by ingesting poison in a hotel room in Enid, Oklahoma.
News reports indicated that George botched a suicide attempt nine months earlier.
Believing he was dying, George reportedly told the wife of a local Methodist minister: ‘I am not David Elihu George. I am the one who killed the best man that ever lived. I am J. Wilkes Booth.’
After George’s death, newspapers printed his image alongside that of Booth and people thought there was an uncanny resemblance.
George’s body was then embalmed and paraded around America, where it was touted as Booth’s mummified corpse.
Bates then gained custody of the cadaver and rented it out to circuses, carnivals, fairs, and midways, where it became a tourist attraction.
The mummy is now believed to be in the hands of a private collector.
The courts have so far denied requests to exhume the body in Booth’s grave and conduct DNA tests to determine if it is really him.
2 comments:
Just another conspiracy theory. Yawn.
The wanted poster for John Wilkes Booth was the first one in history with an actual photographic rendering of the wanted person on it. Also, if I remember right, the reward offered was $250,000. In 1865 you could have bought a fair-size town for that kind of money.
I am inclined to agree with Trey on this. Its' bullshit. I know. Elvis told me last week. He was working behind the counter at a 7-11 on Hwy 99 near Fresno.
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