Texarkana Gazette

NEWLY RELEASED JFK FILES: NO CIA-OSWALD CONNECTION,

- By Deb Riechmann and Alanna Durkin Richer

WASHINGTON—Newly released government documents regarding John F. Kennedy’s assassinat­ion say allegation­s that Lee Harvey Oswald was connected to the CIA were “totally unfounded.”

A 1975 CIA memo says a thorough search of agency records in and outside the United States was conducted to determine whether Oswald had been used by the agency or connected with it in “any conceivabl­e way.”

The memo said the search came up empty. The memo also said there was also no indication that any other U.S. agency used Oswald as a source or for recruitmen­t.

The National Archives released another 676 government documents related to the assassinat­ion on Friday— the third public release so far this year. Under law, all the documents were to be disclosed to the public last week.

Most of the latest release comprises 553 records from the CIA that previously were withheld in their entirety. There also are records from the Justice and Defense department­s, the House Select Committee on Assassinat­ions and the National Archives.

University of Virginia historian Larry Sabato complained that many of the documents in the latest release were still heavily redacted. He tweeted about a 144-page record, titled “Material Reviewed at CIA headquarte­rs by House Select Committee on Assassinat­ions staff members,” that had writing on only a handful of pages.

President Donald Trump has ordered the release of all records related to the assassinat­ion, and they are expected to be made public on a rolling basis during the next three to four weeks. He also directed agencies to take another look at redactions and withhold informatio­n only in the rarest of circumstan­ces.

One record showed how U.S. officials scrambled after the assassinat­ion to round up informatio­n about Oswald’s trip to Mexico City weeks earlier. Officials wondered whether Oswald had been trying to get visas at the Soviet and Cuban embassies in Mexico City in order to “make a quick escape after assassinat­ing the president.”

A CIA message sent Nov. 24, 1963— two days after Kennedy was killed— said an “important question” that remained unsolved was whether Oswald had been planning to travel right away or return to the U.S. and leave later.

The message said that although it appeared Oswald “was then thinking only about a peaceful change of residence to the Soviet Union, it is also possible that he was getting documented to make a quick escape after assassinat­ing the president.”

Another record dated April 11, 1964, recounted a visit to the CIA by three staff members of the Warren Commission, which was set up to investigat­e the assassinat­ion.

The memo said the staff members indicated that Thomas Mann, former ambassador to Mexico and then-assistant secretary for inter-American affairs, “still has the ‘feeling in his guts’ that (Cuban leader Fidel) Castro hired Oswald to kill Kennedy. They said, however, that the commission has not been able to get any proof of that.”

Also in the latest release was a 20-page FBI analysis of civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr. dated March 12, 1968—a month before he was assassinat­ed on April 4, 1968. One section alleges that King was attracted to former members of the Communist Party in America. It notes that two previous aides were party members and eight others, who helped shape King’s organizati­on in its early stages, had communist affiliatio­ns.

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