Courtroom sketch of Lyndal Shaneyfelt testifying during the Clay Shaw trial

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Courtroom sketch of Lyndal Shaneyfelt testifying during the Clay Shaw trial

Courtroom sketch of Lyndal Shaneyfelt testifying during the Clay Shaw trial. In the drawing, Shaneyfelt is talking into a microphone he is holding in his right hand, while he gestures to a large-scale map of Dealey Plaza with his left hand. Shaw, wearing a blue suit, sits nearby. The artist was Charles Edgerton Kavenagh, who had recently joined ABC News from the New York Herald Tribune.The bottom of the sketch is signed:"C. KavenaghABC News - WashingtonClay Shaw Trial 2/14/69 New Orleans"

Object Details
Object title:

Courtroom sketch of Lyndal Shaneyfelt testifying during the Clay Shaw trial

Date:

02/14/1969

Medium:

Paper

Dimensions:

12 x 17 3/4 in. (30.5 x 45.1 cm)

Credit line:

Lyndal L. Shaneyfelt Collection/The Sixth Floor Museum at Dealey Plaza

Object number:

2004.037.0119

Curatorial Note:

Because cameras were not allowed in the courtroom during the Shaw trial, TV news employed sketch artists to create color drawings of the proceedings for their evening newscast. - Gary Mack, Curator

Lyndal L. Shaneyfelt (1916-2014) was a document examiner and photographic expert with the FBI. He joined the Bureau in 1940 and became a special agent in 1951. As a special agent assigned to the document section of the FBI laboratory in Washington, D.C., Shaneyfelt testified to the Warren Commission in 1964, having analyzed film and photographs to determine the site and angle of the bullets fired. Five years later, he was called to testify at the Clay Shaw trial in New Orleans. During his testimony, the defense objected to another screening of the Abraham Zapruder home movie of the assassination, arguing that it had already been shown in the courtroom three separate times--once at full speed, once in slow motion and frame by frame. [Filmmaker Abraham Zapruder had testified the day before.] With the jury removed from the courtroom, the film was screened once for Mr. Shaneyfelt. After the jury returned to the courtroom, the judge overruled the defense objection, and the film was shown once again with the jury present. Afterwards, Shaneyfelt was asked a series of specific questions about his study of the Zapruder film during the Warren Commission investigation. -- Stephen Fagin, Curator

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Courtroom sketch of Lyndal Shaneyfelt testifying during the Clay Shaw trial

Courtroom sketch of Lyndal Shaneyfelt testifying during the Clay Shaw trial. In the drawing, Shaneyfelt is talking into a microphone he is holding in his right hand, while he gestures to a large-scale map of Dealey Plaza with his left hand. Shaw, wearing a blue suit, sits nearby. The artist was Charles Edgerton Kavenagh, who had recently joined ABC News from the New York Herald Tribune.The bottom of the sketch is signed:"C. KavenaghABC News - WashingtonClay Shaw Trial 2/14/69 New Orleans"

Object Details
Object title:

Courtroom sketch of Lyndal Shaneyfelt testifying during the Clay Shaw trial

Date:

02/14/1969

Terms:

Trials

Dealey Plaza

Sketches

Clay Shaw Trial

Assassination

Investigations

Shaw, Clay

Kavenagh, Charles Edgerton

Shaneyfelt, Lyndal

ABC

New Orleans

Medium:

Paper

Dimensions:

12 x 17 3/4 in. (30.5 x 45.1 cm)

Credit line:

Lyndal L. Shaneyfelt Collection/The Sixth Floor Museum at Dealey Plaza

Object number:

2004.037.0119

Curatorial Note:

Because cameras were not allowed in the courtroom during the Shaw trial, TV news employed sketch artists to create color drawings of the proceedings for their evening newscast. - Gary Mack, Curator

Lyndal L. Shaneyfelt (1916-2014) was a document examiner and photographic expert with the FBI. He joined the Bureau in 1940 and became a special agent in 1951. As a special agent assigned to the document section of the FBI laboratory in Washington, D.C., Shaneyfelt testified to the Warren Commission in 1964, having analyzed film and photographs to determine the site and angle of the bullets fired. Five years later, he was called to testify at the Clay Shaw trial in New Orleans. During his testimony, the defense objected to another screening of the Abraham Zapruder home movie of the assassination, arguing that it had already been shown in the courtroom three separate times--once at full speed, once in slow motion and frame by frame. [Filmmaker Abraham Zapruder had testified the day before.] With the jury removed from the courtroom, the film was screened once for Mr. Shaneyfelt. After the jury returned to the courtroom, the judge overruled the defense objection, and the film was shown once again with the jury present. Afterwards, Shaneyfelt was asked a series of specific questions about his study of the Zapruder film during the Warren Commission investigation. -- Stephen Fagin, Curator