The famed plastic prison. Yes. It's present day. Kennedy's 80-year-old killer stares on, through the thick transparent plastic. Time is running short — visitors are permitted only 20 minutes with the man — and there are so many questions left to ask. People want to believe the Warren Commission report because believing the Warren Commission report is easy. It's safe. But there are many loose threads... too many to count. The last round of questions come, desperate now:

Who manipulated Oswald? If not Lehnsherr, then what man put him up there in the Book Depository? Why did Lehnsherr want to kill the president in the first place? Was it because Kennedy created Project: WideAwake, the CIA force that killed Brotherhood of Mutants members Azazel and Tempest earlier that year? Perhaps it's the mention of his old, long-dead comrades that sparks the sudden movement... or perhaps it's something else... but Lehnsherr leans forward now. His lined face is so close to the plastic wall, his breath condenses on its surface. He opens his mouth, and — for the first time in fifty years — speaks to a reporter.

"Whoever said that was Oswald in the warehouse?" he says. His voice is low. German accent. Smooth. It sounds like butterscotch. "And whoever said the killer was a man? And whoever said I wanted Kennedy dead because my brothers and sisters were being killed?" He sneers.

"Humans," he says, disgusted.

And with that, Lehnsherr turns away. The interview is over.

The search for Kennedy's true killer, however, may never be.