Albuquerque Journal

JFK papers out, with exceptions

Some of the most eagerly anticipate­d records have been held for review

- BY IAN SHAPIRA, STEVE HENDRIX AND CAROL D. LEONNIG

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump on Thursday evening delayed the release of thousands of pages of classified documents related to the John F. Kennedy assassinat­ion, bowing to pressure from the CIA, FBI and other federal agencies still seeking to keep some final secrets about the nearly 54-year-old investigat­ion.

The president allowed the immediate release of 2,800 records by the National Archives, following a lastminute scramble to meet a 25-year legal deadline. Following lobbying by national security officials, the remaining documents will be reviewed during a 180-day period. In a memo released by the White House, Trump said: “I am ordering today that the veil finally be lifted. At the same time, executive department­s and agencies have proposed to me that certain informatio­n should continue to be redacted because of national security, law enforcemen­t, and foreign affairs concerns. I have no choice — today — but to accept those redactions rather than allow potentiall­y irreversib­le harm to our nation’s

security.”

The records were put online at 7:30 p.m. EDT. The thousands of field reports, cables and interview summaries from dozens of FBI, CIA and congressio­nal investigat­ors reveal the minutiae of a chase for informatio­n that spanned decades and covered continents. Usually typed, stamped “Secret” and often annotated by hand, the files are a paper trail of detective grunt work, leads exhausted, dead-ends encountere­d, sources checked and rechecked.

Many of the files reveal the desperate search for Lee Harvey Oswald’s possible connection­s to communists, Cubans, or both, in the months before he shot Kennedy on Nov. 22, 1963.

Several show the FBI’s often extraordin­ary efforts to identify suspected communists in the United States. Dozens of them amount to brief records on individual­s whose names were drawn from the mailing list for a publicatio­n called “The Worker.”

Some documents summarize internal discussion­s within Communist Party meetings after the assassinat­ion, discussing whether Oswald was innocent and whether communists would be blamed for Kennedy’s death. Agents ran down rumors from prisoners and poets.

One FBI memo from April 1964 details Director J. Edgar Hoover’s interest in connecting key players. He tells the New York field office to check out a tip that, prior to the assassinat­ion, “a meeting took place at Jack Ruby’s Carousel Club in Dallas,” attended by Ruby, a man whose name is illegible, and Dallas Police Officer J.D. Tippit,” who was shot by Oswald as he fled from the scene of the Kennedy shooting.

Oswald, a troubled former Marine who temporaril­y defected to the Soviet Union at one point, was killed by Ruby at Dallas police headquarte­rs on live television, a stunning turn that fueled decades of conspiracy theories.

The government was facing a Thursday deadline for disclosing the records, and Trump had tweeted twice that the documents would be made public.

Given Trump’s enthusiasm, legions of assassinat­ion scholars, profession­als and hobbyists alike had been waiting throughout the day to begin a reading frenzy. Any delay or limitation­s of the release could only be ordered by the president.

In his memo Thursday night, Trump said that any agency wanting to continue withholdin­g documents after April 26 “should be extremely circumspec­t in recommendi­ng any further postponeme­nt of full disclosure of records.”

Some of the material that assassinat­ion experts had been most eager to review was not included in the documents released Thursday. The missing records include a 338-page file on J. Walton Moore, the head of the CIA office in Dallas at the time of the killing, and an 18-page dossier on Gordon McClendon, a Dallas businessma­n who conferred with Ruby just before he shot Oswald. Several files on notorious anti-Castro Cuban exiles were apparently withheld, including those focusing on Luis Posada and Orlando Bosch, who had been accused of a 1976 airline bombing that killed 73 people.

Researcher­s had hoped the release would shed new light on Oswald’s movements and contacts in the months before he shot Kennedy. Historians were particular­ly eager for new details of Oswald’s six-day trip to Mexico City, where he met with Cubans and Soviets two months before the assassinat­ion.

None of those documents appeared to be in the batch released Thursday. Nor were there revelation­s on Watergate burglars E. Howard Hunt and James McCord, both of whom were longtime CIA operatives of interest to assassinat­ion theorists.

Experts did not expect any of the long-classified material to deliver a blow to the Warren Commission’s conclusion that Oswald was the lone gunman.

The release was mandated by a 1992 act of Congress that was meant to finally empty the official cupboards of classified material that had been shrouded in controvers­y and hearsay for decades. The President John F. Kennedy Assassinat­ion Records Act, signed by President George H.W. Bush on Oct. 26, 1992, required that “each assassinat­ion record shall be publicly disclosed in full ... no later than the date that is 25 years after the date” of its enactment.

But there was an out: The president would have the right to withhold some records that, if revealed, would harm national security and outweigh “the public interest in disclosure.” The law also requires the administra­tion to publish an unclassifi­ed explanatio­n for the postponeme­nt in the Federal Register.

David Boren, the former chairman of the Senate Intelligen­ce Committee who co-sponsored the records release law, said in a statement Thursday to The Post: “It was my intention that all documents be released in unredacted form except for in the most rare, exceptiona­l circumstan­ces involving current and continuing national security concerns.”

Trump had been lobbied to withhold some of the files by CIA Director Mike Pompeo, according to Trump confidant Roger Stone. In a statement, the CIA said its redactions were meant to protect national security interests, such as the names of CIA assets and current and former CIA officers, intelligen­ce-gathering methods, and sensitive partnershi­ps that remain viable today.

But the agency also vowed to release all of its Kennedy assassinat­ion records. “Every single one of the approximat­ely 18,000 remaining CIA records in the collection will ultimately be released, with no document withheld in full,” the statement said. Those CIA documents, come April, could still retain redactions. The statement said the redacted informatio­n in the 18,000 pages represents less than 1 percent of all CIA informatio­n in the collection.

Many of the documents were created in the 1990s, making some of the informatio­n more sensitive and recent than older documents from decades ago.

The National Archives has had custody of the records since the Warren Commission published its investigat­ive findings in 1964.

In 1991, Oliver Stone released his movie, “JFK,” which suggested that Kennedy was killed in a grand conspiracy involving the CIA, the FBI and the military. At the end of the film, audiences were informed that many of the investigat­ive documents would not be released until 2029. Soon, protests erupted, and Congress passed the assassinat­ion records act that was signed into law a year later.

By the early 1990s, only a sliver of the Warren Commission’s papers, just 2 percent, had been concealed, either partially or in full, according to the National Archives. Since then, the archives has made periodic releases of its repository, which totals more than 5 million pages. In a recent article on its website, the archives said that 88 percent of its documents are fully open; 11 percent have been released but with redactions; and 1 percent has been fully withheld.

In early 2016, the website Government­Attic.org obtained through the Freedom of Informatio­n Act the list of what was then more than 3,600 records that had been entirely withheld. Titles of the documents included “Personalit­y File on Lee Harvey Oswald” and “Tape of Mr. William K. Harvey’s Interview, 4/10/75,” a reference to the legendary CIA officer who oversaw the agency’s plots to kill Fidel Castro.

A majority of Americans believe others besides Oswald were involved in the shooting, according to repeated Gallup polls conducted over the past 50 years. Since the Warren Commission concluded its investigat­ion, historians and journalist­s have written extensivel­y about how the CIA deliberate­ly concealed informatio­n about Oswald’s interactio­ns with Cubans or Soviets in Mexico City before the killing.

Conspiracy theories have dogged the investigat­ion in part because of the Warren Commission’s marching orders. President Lyndon B. Johnson told the members of his handpicked investigat­ive board that he wanted to squash the raging public fears that a foreign power or communist operatives had killed Kennedy. He told Supreme Court Chief Justice Earl Warren that the country was “confronted with threatenin­g divisions and suspicions” and that it was the commission’s “patriotic mission” to squelch “dangerous rumors.”

Warren was a close and loyal ally of Kennedy’s. He short-circuited some areas of investigat­ion that could embarrass the president. He personally, and privately, interviewe­d former first lady Jacqueline Kennedy, a key witness, rather than allow his staff to pose their own questions.

Johnson himself had worried that a foreign power may have been involved, according to a 1969 interview with Walter Cronkite.

“I can’t honestly say that I’ve ever been completely relieved of the fact that there might have been internatio­nal connection­s,” Johnson told the television newsman.

Johnson later asked that this portion of the interview be deleted from the public broadcast.

Philip Shenon, author of a 2013 book on the Warren Commission, interviewe­d one of the commission’s chief investigat­ors, David Slawson, for Politico two years ago and showed him documents that had been declassifi­ed in the 1990s but that Slawson had never seen. Slawson’s conclusion: The CIA tampered with surveillan­ce evidence of Oswald in Mexico City that would have revealed the agency knew of Oswald’s threat well before the assassinat­ion.

Even the CIA publicly acknowledg­ed in 2014 that John McCone, its director at the time of the assassinat­ion, participat­ed in a “benign cover-up,” according to a paper by agency historian David Robarge. His article said McCone was “complicit in keeping incendiary and diversiona­ry issues off the commission’s agenda.”

 ?? JIM ALTGENS/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? President John F. Kennedy, next to first lady Jacqueline Kennedy, waves from his car in a motorcade in Dallas shortly before he was assassinat­ed.
JIM ALTGENS/ASSOCIATED PRESS President John F. Kennedy, next to first lady Jacqueline Kennedy, waves from his car in a motorcade in Dallas shortly before he was assassinat­ed.
 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Lee Harvey Oswald, center, is held in custody at a Dallas police station one day after President Kennedy’s assassinat­ion. Oswald was fatally shot the next day by Jack Ruby, which fueled conspiracy theories.
ASSOCIATED PRESS Lee Harvey Oswald, center, is held in custody at a Dallas police station one day after President Kennedy’s assassinat­ion. Oswald was fatally shot the next day by Jack Ruby, which fueled conspiracy theories.

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