Did Lyndon B. Johnson Help Kill JFK? episode artwork

EPISODE · Jun 17, 2026 · 59 MIN

Did Lyndon B. Johnson Help Kill JFK?

from Disturbing History · host Disturbing History-True Stories

The murder of John F. Kennedy in Dallas on November twenty-second, nineteen sixty-three remains the most contested crime in American history, and at the center of the contest stands the man who became president before Air Force One left Texas soil.This episode of Disturbing History takes on the theory that refuses to die, the claim that Lyndon Baines Johnson helped engineer the assassination of the president he served. It is, by design, a different kind of episode. The show deals in facts, but this is one of those rare cases where documented fact and unproven conspiracy run straight into each other, and rather than pretend otherwise, this episode walks the listener into that collision and lets them see exactly where one ends and the other begins.The story moves through the solid ground first, the timeline of the assassination, the arrest of Lee Harvey Oswald, the silencing of Oswald by Jack Ruby on live television, and the swearing-in of Johnson on the tarmac at Love Field beside a widow still wearing her husband's blood. From there it lays out the two official answers the United States government has given, the Warren Commission's lone-gunman conclusion of nineteen sixty-four and the House Select Committee on Assassinations' finding in nineteen seventy-nine that Kennedy was probably killed as the result of a conspiracy, a conclusion built on acoustic evidence that later collapsed under scientific review.That official contradiction is the soil everything else grows in.Then comes the case against Johnson at full strength. His ruthlessness and ambition. The Bobby Baker and Billie Sol Estes scandals closing in on him in the fall of sixty-three. The reported press scrutiny of his fortune. The Texas oil and defense networks behind his career.And the specific, named accusations that have circulated for decades, the Madeleine Brown account of a gathering at the Murchison mansion the night before the killing, the Billie Sol Estes claims naming Mac Wallace as Johnson's triggerman, and the Barr McClellan fingerprint allegation that briefly aired on the History Channel before independent historians rejected it and the network pulled the episode. Each claim is given fairly and then tested against the record, and each, examined honestly, fails to make the jump from story to proof, including in the roughly eighty thousand pages of long-secret files released to the public in twenty twenty-five, which revealed a great deal about Cold War covert operations and nothing that implicated Johnson.The episode closes where it must, in the uncomfortable middle. Johnson is the man who gained the most. Johnson is not, on any evidence that has ever held up, the man shown to have done it. Both are true. Drawing on an investigator's hard rule that motive is where a case begins and never where it ends, the host lays the documented facts and the unproven beliefs side by side and hands the verdict to the listener.This is the dark heart of twentieth-century American history, an open wound the country never fully closed, and tonight the ending belongs to you.Have a forgotten historical mystery, disturbing event, unsolved crime, or hidden conspiracy you think deserves investigation?Send your suggestions to [email protected] History is a dark history podcast exploring unsolved mysteries, secret societies, historical conspiracies, lost civilizations, and the shadowy stories buried beneath the surface of the past.Follow the show and enable automatic downloads so you never miss a deep dive into history’s most unsettling secrets.Because sometimes the truth is darker than fiction.

The murder of John F. Kennedy in Dallas on November twenty-second, nineteen sixty-three remains the most contested crime in American history, and at the center of the contest stands the man who became president before Air Force One left Texas soil.This episode of Disturbing History takes on the theory that refuses to die, the claim that Lyndon Baines Johnson helped engineer the assassination of the president he served. It is, by design, a different kind of episode. The show deals in facts, but this is one of those rare cases where documented fact and unproven conspiracy run straight into each other, and rather than pretend otherwise, this episode walks the listener into that collision and lets them see exactly where one ends and the other begins.The story moves through the solid ground first, the timeline of the assassination, the arrest of Lee Harvey Oswald, the silencing of Oswald by Jack Ruby on live television, and the swearing-in of Johnson on the tarmac at Love Field beside a widow still wearing her husband's blood. From there it lays out the two official answers the United States government has given, the Warren Commission's lone-gunman conclusion of nineteen sixty-four and the House Select Committee on Assassinations' finding in nineteen seventy-nine that Kennedy was probably killed as the result of a conspiracy, a conclusion built on acoustic evidence that later collapsed under scientific review.That official contradiction is the soil everything else grows in.Then comes the case against Johnson at full strength. His ruthlessness and ambition. The Bobby Baker and Billie Sol Estes scandals closing in on him in the fall of sixty-three. The reported press scrutiny of his fortune. The Texas oil and defense networks behind his career.And the specific, named accusations that have circulated for decades, the Madeleine Brown account of a gathering at the Murchison mansion the night before the killing, the Billie Sol Estes claims naming Mac Wallace as Johnson's triggerman, and the Barr McClellan fingerprint allegation that briefly aired on the History Channel before independent historians rejected it and the network pulled the episode. Each claim is given fairly and then tested against the record, and each, examined honestly, fails to make the jump from story to proof, including in the roughly eighty thousand pages of long-secret files released to the public in twenty twenty-five, which revealed a great deal about Cold War covert operations and nothing that implicated Johnson.The episode closes where it must, in the uncomfortable middle. Johnson is the man who gained the most. Johnson is not, on any evidence that has ever held up, the man shown to have done it. Both are true. Drawing on an investigator's hard rule that motive is where a case begins and never where it ends, the host lays the documented facts and the unproven beliefs side by side and hands the verdict to the listener.This is the dark heart of twentieth-century American history, an open wound the country never fully closed, and tonight the ending belongs to you.Have a forgotten historical mystery, disturbing event, unsolved crime, or hidden conspiracy you think deserves investigation?Send your suggestions to [email protected] History is a dark history podcast exploring unsolved mysteries, secret societies, historical conspiracies, lost civilizations, and the shadowy stories buried beneath the surface of the past.Follow the show and enable automatic downloads so you never miss a deep dive into history’s most unsettling secrets.Because sometimes the truth is darker than fiction.

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Did Lyndon B. Johnson Help Kill JFK?

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How long is this episode of Disturbing History?

This episode is 59 minutes long.

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This episode was published on June 17, 2026.

What is this episode about?

The murder of John F. Kennedy in Dallas on November twenty-second, nineteen sixty-three remains the most contested crime in American history, and at the center of the contest stands the man who became president before Air Force One left Texas...

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