Conspiracy Museum

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The Conspiracy Museum is a private exhibition in the West End Historic District of downtown Dallas, Texas (USA). It opened in 1995, funded by a retired architect who calls himself an "assassinologist," seizes on the public's enduring skepticism about the Kennedy assassination and government in general. The museum embraces all things conspiratorial and strings them together.

The Conspiracy Museum was opened in 1995 by R.B. Cutler of Massachusetts. It is located across the street from the Kennedy Memorial in Dallas, Texas. Not only does the museum cover the assassination of JFK, but it also covers Robert F. Kennedy, Martin Luther King, Abraham Lincoln, and Ted Kennedy's Chappaquiddick incident. Cutler's argument is that all these conspiracies can be tied together.

Cutler calls this the Professional War Machine, and says it's made up of elements of the CIA, the FBI, world bankers, and more.

For people seeking conservative conspiracy theories or specific facts to back these theories up, The Conspiracy Museum may disappoint. Cutler's 9-shot JFK/Dealey Plaza scenario leaves competing theorists and info-seekers with a twisted stomach, (especially when he claims that the so-called "fatal head shot" comes from the Texas School Book Depository and not the "Grassy Knoll.")

Recent evidence indicates the Conspiracy Museum is no longer operating: as of March 2007, its URL (www.conspiracymuseum.com) does not reflect the museum and its listed phone number (214.741.3040) is disconnected. It is unclear if this is a temporary or permanent situation.