A former Secret Service agent, Paul Landis, who was present at President John F. Kennedy's assassination, recently came forward with a revelation that challenges the 'magic bullet' theory and raises questions about the possibility of a second shooter. Landis, now 88 years old, shared his recollection with the New York Times nearly 60 years after the tragic event. He claimed that in the chaos following the shooting, he discovered a nearly pristine bullet on the back seat of the open limousine, just behind where Kennedy had been sitting when he was killed. Landis preserved the bullet for autopsy investigators by placing it on the president's hospital stretcher. This discovery challenges the long-held belief that the 'magic bullet' was found on Texas Governor John Connally's stretcher and suggests it may have rolled from Kennedy's stretcher, potentially undermining the theory and lending support to the idea that Lee Harvey Oswald may not have acted alone in the assassination.