The Zapruder film frames that were used by the Warren Commission were published in black and white as Commission Exhibit 885 in volume XVIII of the Hearings and Exhibits. Copies of the complete film are available on the Internet. One of the first-generation Secret Service copies was loaned to the
Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) in Washington, D.C., which made a second-generation copy. After studies of that copy were made in January 1964, the Warren Commission judged the quality to be inadequate, and requested the original film.
Life brought the original to Washington in February for the commission's viewing, and made color 35mm
slide enlargements from the relevant frames of the original film for the FBI. From those slides, the FBI made a series of black-and-white prints, which were given to the commission for its use. In response to an inquiry, then-FBI director
J. Edgar Hoover wrote in 1965 that frames 314 and 315 had been swapped due to a printing error, and that that error did not exist in the original Warren Commission exhibits. In early 1967,
Life released a statement saying that four frames of the original (frames 208–211) were accidentally destroyed, and the adjacent frames damaged, by a
Life photo lab technician on November 23, 1963.
Life released those missing frames from the first-generation copy it had received from the film's original version. The Zapruder frames outside the section used in the commission's exhibits, frames 155–157 and 341, were also damaged and were spliced out of the original rendition of the film, but are present in the first-generation copies. In 1966, assassination researcher
Josiah Thompson, while working for
Life, was brought in to examine a first-generation copy of the film and a set of color 35mm slides made from the original. He tried negotiating with
Life for the rights to print important individual frames in his book
Six Seconds in Dallas.
Life refused to approve the use of any of the frames, even after Thompson offered to give all profits from the book sales to
Life. Following its publishing in 1967, Thompson's book featured some very detailed charcoal drawings of important individual frames, plus photo reproductions of the four missing ones. Time Inc. filed a lawsuit against Thompson and his publishing company for
copyright infringement. A U.S. District Court ruled in 1968 that the Time Inc. copyright of the Zapruder film was not violated by invoking the doctrine of
fair use. The court held that "there is a public interest in having the fullest information available on the murder of President Kennedy, saying that Thompson "did serious work on the subject and has a theory entitled to public consideration" and that "the copying by defendants was fair and reasonable." In 1967,
Life hired New Jersey film lab Manhattan Effects to make a
16 mm film copy of the Zapruder film's original version. Pleased with the results, they asked for a
35 mm internegative to be made. Mo Weitzman made several internegatives in 1968, giving the best to
Life and retaining the test copies. Weitzman set up his own optical house and motion-picture postproduction facility later that year. Hired in 1969, employee and assassination buff
Robert Groden used one of Weitzman's copies and an optical printer to make versions of the Zapruder film with close-ups and minimize the shakiness of Zapruder's camera. Before the
1969 trial of Clay Shaw, a businessman from
New Orleans, for conspiracy in connection with the assassination, a copy of the film made several generations from the original was
subpoenaed from Time Inc. in 1967 by New Orleans
District Attorney Jim Garrison for use at Shaw's
grand jury hearing. Garrison unsuccessfully subpoenaed the original film in 1968. The courtroom showings of Garrison's copy in 1969 were the first time it had been shown in public as a film. Garrison allowed copies of the film to be made and these low quality copies began circulating among assassination researchers and were known to many journalists as well. Zapruder's film was aired as part of a Los Angeles area television newscast on February 14, 1969. The first broadcast of the Zapruder film was on the late-night television show
Underground News with Chuck Collins, originating on WSNS-TV, Ch 44, Chicago in 1970. It was given to director Howie Samuelsohn by
Penn Jones and later aired in syndication to Philadelphia, Detroit, Kansas City, and St. Louis. On March 6, 1975, on the
ABC late-night television show
Good Night America, hosted by
Geraldo Rivera, assassination researchers
Robert Groden and
Dick Gregory presented the first-ever US network television showing of the Zapruder film. The public's response and outrage to that television showing quickly led to the forming of the
Hart-
Schweiker investigation, which contributed to the
Church Committee Investigation on Intelligence Activities by the United States, and resulted in the
House Select Committee on Assassinations investigation. Zoomatic movie camera used to shoot the film, in the collection of the U.S. National Archives In April 1975, in settlement of a
royalties suit between Time Inc. and Zapruder's heirs that arose from the ABC showing, Time Inc. sold the film's initial rendition and its copyright back to the Zapruder family for the token sum of $1. Time Inc. wanted to donate the film to the U.S. government. The Zapruder family originally refused to consent. In 1978, the family transferred the film to the
National Archives and Records Administration for appropriate preservation and safe-keeping, while still retaining ownership of the film and its copyright. Director
Oliver Stone paid over $85,000 to the Zapruder family for use of the Zapruder film in his motion picture
JFK (1991). On April 24, 1997, the
Assassination Records Review Board (ARRB), which the JFK Act created, announced a "Statement of Policy and Intent with Regard to the Zapruder Film". The ARRB re-affirmed that the Zapruder film was an "assassination record" within the JFK Act's meaning and directed it to be transferred on August 1, 1998, from its present-day location in NARA's film collection to the John F. Kennedy Assassination Records Collection maintained by NARA. As required by the
US federal law for such a seizure under
eminent domain, payment to Zapruder's heirs was attempted. Because the film is unique, its value was difficult to ascertain. Eventually, following arbitration with the Zapruder heirs, the government provided compensation $16 million in 1999 for the film. The film's relevant history is covered in a 2003
David R. Wrone book entitled ''The Zapruder Film: Reframing JFK's Assassination''. Wrone is a history professor who tracks the chain of evidence for the film. ==Study of the film==