I've read those too, but really, history is so full of coincidences that we would get rather fidgety if we considered every one of them creepy.
In case of some of the coincidences they are not 100% accurate the way they appear here.
Lincoln was shot in a theater and his assassin ran and hid in a warehouse.
Kennedy was shot from a warehouse and his assassin ran and hid in a theater.
One could put it like that depending on definition, but in Booth's case the place of the assassination actually was a theater while the place where Lee Harvey Oswald was arrested was a cinema (somehow a logical choice to hide in a dark and crowded room, isn't it?). The place where Booth was finally found was a tobacco barn. One could call it a warehouse technically, but there is not much of a similarity between a tobacco barn and the schoolbook depository that played a role in the Kennedy assassination. Also the text makes it sounds like both places played a role right after the assassination, but neither did Oswald run and hide in the cinema right away (in fact a policeman was to be killed by Oswald near his own home before he was finally arrested in the cinema later that same day). In case of Booth he had been on the run for 12 days before he was caught and visited many places before ending up in that tobacco barn.
Booth and Oswald were assassinated before their trials.
Depends on how you define "assassinated". I guess the case of Oswald would qualify for the term, but Booth was just shot and mortally wounded while resisting arrest which I think is something that doesn't usually run under the label "assassination".
Anyway, if you like this kind of story, did you hear about the "curse of Tippecanoe"? The name refers to the defeat of the Shawnee Indians in the battle of Tippecanoe (1812) where they were defeated by later president William Henry Harrison. Harrison was elected in 1840 to serve the shortest ever presidency in 1841 (rather than an Indian curse though I guess the shortest ever presidency was the somewhat logical consequence of his holding the longest ever inauguration speech in pouring rain refusing to hold it indoors or even put on a mantle. Thus the "hero of Tippecanoe" died from Pneumonia because he was to proud to take any protection against ugly weather). Anyway, ever since presidents who were elected in 20 years intervals from 1840 developed the habit of not leaving office alive. In 1860 Lincoln was elected to be assassinated after his second election, in 1880 Garfield was elected and he was assassinated too, the same goes for McKinnley who was elected in 1900, and Warren G. Harding of 1920 died from a stroke or heart attack (while there are conspiracy theories about poisoning), Franklin D. Roosevelt who had been elected for the third time in 1940 and was to be elected a fourth time in 1944 died of Cerebral hemorrhage, JFK elected in 1960 was assassinated. Ronald Reagan, elected in 1980 was the first to break with that tradition, though it was a close call as he was seriously injured in an assassination attempt. In case of Georg W. Bush elected in 2000 I think the worst scratch he got in office was caused by a Pretzel. Looks like the "curse of Tippecanoe" is wearing off, so those of you who are born in the US should be safe if you want to run for presidency in 2020.
