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  1. 20. Nov. 2013 · Brian Todd reports on Marina Oswald, the widow of JFK's assassin, and what life has been like since the assassination.

    • 2 Min.
    • 222,3K
    • CNN
  2. 14. Juni 2022 · She took on the name Marina Oswald Porter, and the family moved to Richardson, Texas. Over the years, though, Marina began to shy away from making public statements about her deceased husband. In 2003 a reporter for The Independent drove to her home to talk to her, only to be told that she wasn't interested in talking.

  3. 13. Feb. 2024 · Marina Oswald Porter's long-lost 1996 interview with JFK Facts Podcast host Jefferson Morley releases tonight. Marina Oswald Porter, the widow of Lee Harvey Oswald, believes that her husband did not kill the president of the United States. She is one of the most important witnesses in the JFK saga. Yet her story is largely unknown.

  4. 13. Feb. 2024 · Host Jefferson Morley speaks with the widow of the accused assassin who denied killing JFK. If you enjoyed this episode, please consider supporting our indep...

    • 38 Min.
    • 2009
    • JFK Facts on Substack
  5. 6. Nov. 2023 · Lee Harvey Oswald Wife Marina Oswald Porter. Lee Harvey Oswald wife, Marina Oswald, was born in the Soviet Union in 1941 and met Oswald in 1961. They married six weeks later and had two daughters, June and Audrey. In 1962, Oswald, along with his family, defected to the United States. They established themselves in Dallas, Texas, where Oswald ...

  6. 14. Feb. 2024 · Lee Oswald, the ex-Marine who defected to the Soviet Union in 1959, had impulsively married a local girl, Marina Prusakova in Minsk in June 1961. The couple moved to the United States in May 1962. By November 1963, they had two young children and were separated. After JFK was assassinated, her husband, the chief suspect in the shooting, was ...

  7. Suddenly a widow at age 22, with two young children to raise, Marina Oswald seemed overwhelmed by the media maelstrom enveloping her. Complicating her situation was that Oswald spoke very little English, was jobless and feared being returned to Russia. The churchgoer turned to her minister at Ann Arbor’s First Presbyterian Church.