LOS ANGELES, CA (AP).- The simple wooden coffin that was supposed to be Lee Harvey Oswald’s final resting place will soon have a new resting place of its own after a mystery bidder bought it at auction for more than $87,000. The coffin was put on the auction block late last month by a Texas funeral home owner who swapped it with Oswald’s family for a new one when the body was briefly exhumed in 1981. It sold Thursday evening for $87,469, which includes a 20 percent buyers’ fee. “Anything connected to the JFK assassination sells for really high,” said Nate D. Sanders of Nate D. Sanders Auctions in Santa Monica. He declined to provide details on the winning bidder, but said the bidder might speak publicly Friday. The auction was extended two hours because of a last-minute rush of bidding. Sanders