JFK Assassination Investigation -- Section 14 of 15
The Declassified Files
Report 14 — The Reckoning

The Declassified Files

What they've released, what they're still hiding, and why documents about a 1963 assassination remain classified into the 2020s

Key Findings

I. The Catalyst: Oliver Stone, Public Outrage, and the JFK Records Act

For nearly three decades after President Kennedy's assassination, the federal government kept hundreds of thousands of documents sealed from public view. The Warren Commission records were partially available, but vast archives held by the CIA, FBI, Secret Service, and other agencies remained classified. The House Select Committee on Assassinations, which concluded in 1979 that Kennedy was "probably assassinated as a result of a conspiracy," had its records locked away until 2029.

That changed because of a movie. Fact

The Film That Moved Congress

Oliver Stone's JFK, released in December 1991, dramatized New Orleans District Attorney Jim Garrison's investigation into the assassination. The film was controversial and historically disputed, but its closing title card -- noting that the HSCA records would remain sealed for another 38 years[10][42] -- struck a nerve with the American public. Viewing the film measurably increased belief in a conspiracy and decreased belief that Oswald acted alone.

Congress was besieged by the public and quickly passed the President John F. Kennedy Assassination Records Collection Act of 1992[10]. -- Mary Ferrell Foundation, "Freeing the JFK Files"

President George H.W. Bush signed the JFK Records Act into law on October 26, 1992[42][3]. The law had three critical components:

  1. The Collection: All U.S. government records relating to the assassination were to be gathered into a single JFK Assassination Records Collection at the National Archives II facility in College Park, Maryland[3].
  2. The Board: An independent agency, the Assassination Records Review Board (ARRB), would be created to review and compel disclosure[2][4] of records that agencies sought to withhold.
  3. The Deadline: All records were to be fully released no later than 25 years after enactment[42] -- October 26, 2017.

Stone himself testified before Congress in support of the bill[10][56][59]. The ARRB later credited his film as being "at least partially responsible"[10][4] for the Act's passage. Fact

Connections to Other Reports

The HSCA's conspiracy finding, which drove the film's urgency, is analyzed in Report 1: The Warren Commission. The CIA operations that agencies fought to keep hidden are detailed in Report 8: CIA / Intelligence Community.

II. The Assassination Records Review Board (1994-1998)

The five members of the ARRB were appointed by President Clinton, confirmed by the Senate, and sworn in on April 11, 1994. The Board operated for four years, disbanding on September 30, 1998[2][4], after issuing its Final Report.

5M+
Pages Collected
300K+
Individual Records
10
Sworn Depositions
4 Years
Active Operation

What They Collected

The ARRB cast a wide net, adopting a broad definition of "assassination-related" that encompassed not just the crime itself but the entire landscape of covert operations, intelligence activities, and government decision-making in the early 1960s. By the time the Board disbanded, all Warren Commission documents except income tax returns had been released[4] with only minor redactions. Fact

Key Depositions: The Medical Evidence

Douglas Horne, the ARRB's chief analyst for military records[38][40], participated in taking sworn depositions from 10 witnesses and participants in Kennedy's autopsy at Bethesda Naval Medical Center. These depositions, conducted from 1996 to 1998, revealed significant discrepancies in the medical record: Strong Evidence

In May 2025, Horne testified before the House Task Force on Declassification, telling Congress that "the remains of President Kennedy's brain following its examination were placed in a stainless steel container[38] in 1963, but the brain is missing today." Fact

The Secret Service Scandal

In January 1995, just weeks after the ARRB became operational, the Secret Service destroyed presidential protection survey reports for several of President Kennedy's trips[4] in autumn 1963 -- the very documents that would show what security preparations were made (or not made) for the Dallas motorcade. The ARRB discovered this destruction a week later. Fact

The Secret Service destroyed two boxes of 1963 trip reports[4] after being explicitly notified of the JFK Records Act's preservation requirements. -- ARRB Final Report
Connections to Other Reports

The autopsy discrepancies are fully examined in Report 5: The Autopsy Controversies. Secret Service failures in Dallas are covered in the broader investigation's analysis of security breakdowns.

III. The 2017 Deadline: Broken Promises

October 26, 2017, was supposed to be the day America finally saw everything[42][27]. After 25 years, the JFK Records Act mandated full disclosure. What happened instead became a case study in how intelligence agencies resist transparency.[57] Fact

Trump's First-Term Release

President Trump initially pledged to release all remaining files. On October 26, 2017, he authorized the immediate release of 2,800 records[27]. But on the eve of the deadline, the CIA and FBI lobbied intensively for continued withholding. According to Trump confidante Roger Stone, "the CIA was lobbying Trump to withhold at least some of the archived documents." CIA Director Mike Pompeo personally urged Trump to hold back[27] sensitive materials.

Trump compromised: 2,800 documents were released immediately, but thousands more were deferred[27] for a 180-day review period. That review period was extended, then extended again. Trump later said he "regretted" not releasing everything. Fact

What the Agencies Argued

The CIA and FBI cited familiar justifications for continued classification:

Critics noted the absurdity: these were documents about events from 1963. Any human sources would be dead or elderly. Any "methods" would be decades obsolete. Former ARRB Chairman Judge John Tunheim stated bluntly:

I just don't think there is anything in these records that require keeping them secret now[27]. -- Judge John Tunheim, former ARRB Chairman, 2017

IV. The Biden Releases (2021-2023): Incremental Disclosure

President Biden released JFK documents in three tranches[33], each accompanied by continued withholding of select materials:

October 2021
Nearly 1,500 documents released[33]. Biden simultaneously delayed additional records until December 2022, citing the need for agency review.
December 2022
13,173 documents containing newly released information[1][33] posted by the National Archives. Biden approved continued withholding of some materials under agency "transparency plans."
April - June 2023
2,672 additional documents released[1] in full or with fewer redactions. Biden declared that approximately 98% of all documents were now public[33].

Key Revelations

The Biden-era releases, while not producing "bombshells," did yield significant details: Strong Evidence

NARA Release Ref: 2022-12-15 / 13,173 documents
Agency: CIA, FBI, Secret Service, State Dept
Status: ~98% of collection public; ~3,500 documents with partial redactions remaining

The Transparency Plan Problem

Rather than complying with the JFK Records Act's mandatory release framework, the Biden administration allowed agencies to substitute "transparency plans"[9][8] -- self-assessed schedules for future disclosure. The CIA's plan alone covered 3,538 documents[8]. The Mary Ferrell Foundation argued this effectively replaced a congressional mandate with executive discretion, undermining the entire purpose of the 1992 law. Strong Evidence

V. The Trump 2025 Releases: "Full and Complete"

Executive Order 14176

On January 23, 2025, President Trump signed Executive Order 14176[5], titled "Declassification of Records Concerning the Assassinations of President John F. Kennedy, Senator Robert F. Kennedy, and the Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr." The order established as policy that "more than 50 years after these assassinations, the victims' families and the American people deserve the truth[5][46]." Fact

The order gave the Director of National Intelligence and the Attorney General 15 days[5][6][34] to present a plan for "full and complete release" of JFK records. This was the strongest presidential language on declassification to date.

The March 2025 Release

On March 18-20, 2025, the National Archives released approximately 77,100 pages in 2,343 PDF files[1][7][30][31][35][55]. These were documents that had previously been released with redactions -- now published without those redactions. Fact

77,100
Pages Released
2,343
PDF Documents
2,400
New FBI Records Found
139
Jan 2026 Batch

The FBI's Surprise Discovery

In February 2025, responding to Trump's executive order, the FBI reported it had discovered approximately 2,400 previously unknown JFK-related records[24][29] in its own archives. These records were found because the FBI had opened a new Central Records Complex in 2020[24] and begun electronically inventorying closed case files from field offices. The resulting inventory, coupled with better search technology, "yielded additional records related to the assassination of President John F. Kennedy" that had never been recognized as part of the case file. Emerging

These FBI records were transferred to NARA between February and June 2025 and released to the fullest extent possible, though some contained grand jury information protected under section 10 of the JFK Act.

The July 2025 Joannides Release

The most consequential release of 2025 came not from the JFK Collection itself but from the CIA's personnel files. In July 2025, under pressure from the House Task Force on Declassification, the CIA released the full personnel file of George Joannides[21][22][25]. This was the document that researchers had been fighting to obtain for over two decades. Fact

(The Joannides revelations are detailed in Section VII below.)

The January 2026 Batch

On January 30, 2026, an additional 139 documents (approximately 11,022 pages in 140 PDF files) were released[1], continuing the drip of disclosure. Fact

The Revelations

VI. The CIA's "Benign Cover-Up": Confirmed by Their Own Historian

Perhaps the most remarkable acknowledgment of institutional deception came from inside the CIA itself. Fact

David Robarge's Article

David Robarge, the CIA's chief historian, wrote an article titled[13] "DCI John McCone and the Assassination of President John F. Kennedy[13]" that appeared in Studies in Intelligence, the CIA's classified internal journal, in September 2013. The article was drawn from a still-classified 2005 biography of CIA Director McCone. It was quietly declassified in 2014 and made available through the George Washington University National Security Archive[13].

Robarge's central finding was devastating:

Under McCone's and Helms's direction, CIA supported the Warren Commission in a way that may best be described as passive, reactive, and selective[13]. -- David Robarge, CIA Chief Historian, "DCI John McCone and the Assassination of President John F. Kennedy," 2013

Robarge concluded that McCone was "complicit in keeping incendiary and diversionary issues off the commission's agenda[13] and focusing it on what the Agency believed at the time was the 'best truth': that Lee Harvey Oswald, for as yet undetermined motives, had acted alone in killing John Kennedy." Fact

What McCone Withheld

The most critical information hidden from the Warren Commission was the existence of CIA plots to assassinate Fidel Castro -- operations that put the CIA "in cahoots with the Mafia." McCone had inherited these operations from his predecessor Allen Dulles (who, ironically, sat on the Warren Commission). Deputy Director Richard Helms made the decision to keep this information from the Commission, and McCone went along.

The logic of the cover-up was straightforward: if the Commission learned that the CIA had been trying to kill Castro using Mafia hitmen[13][12], it would open an explosive line of inquiry -- specifically, whether Castro had ordered Kennedy's assassination in retaliation. Helms and McCone decided it was better to steer the investigation toward the "lone gunman" conclusion than risk that line of questioning.

Robarge characterized this as a "benign cover-up" -- benign in the CIA's view because it was meant to prevent a destabilizing geopolitical crisis, not to protect assassins. But critics note that the characterization itself is remarkable: the CIA's own historian used the word "cover-up"[13][60] to describe the agency's conduct. Strong Evidence

Connections to Other Reports

The CIA-Mafia assassination plots against Castro are detailed in Report 8: CIA / Intelligence Community and Report 9: The Mob. Allen Dulles's role on the Warren Commission is analyzed in Report 1: The Warren Commission.

VII. George Joannides: The 62-Year Cover-Up Exposed

No single figure better illustrates the CIA's pattern of deception[21][22][43][49] regarding the JFK assassination than George Joannides. His story spans six decades of institutional lying to every body that ever investigated the assassination. Fact

Who Was George Joannides?

In 1963, Joannides was a covert CIA officer running psychological warfare operations[21][43] out of the CIA's Miami station (JMWAVE). His primary operational responsibility was directing and funding the Directorio Revolucionario Estudiantil (DRE), a Cuban exile student group. The CIA provided the DRE with $25,000 per month[21][43] -- money channeled through Joannides.

The DRE-Oswald Connection

In August 1963, DRE members in New Orleans had a series of public encounters with Lee Harvey Oswald[21][43][12], who was distributing pro-Castro "Fair Play for Cuba Committee" leaflets. These encounters included a street confrontation and a radio debate. After the assassination, the DRE immediately publicized Oswald's pro-Castro activities[21][12] and his attempted defection to the Soviet Union -- framing the narrative of Oswald as a communist sympathizer within hours of the shooting. Strong Evidence

The critical question: Did Joannides, as the DRE's CIA handler, know about or direct these encounters with Oswald? And did the DRE's rapid post-assassination publicity campaign serve a CIA propaganda objective?

The Pattern of Deception

The CIA lied about Joannides's role to every investigating body:

1964 -- Warren Commission
The CIA concealed its financial relationship with the DRE[12][21] and Joannides's role as case officer. The Commission never learned that the exile group publicizing Oswald's communist ties was CIA-funded and directed.
1975 -- Church Committee
The CIA again concealed the Joannides-DRE connection during the Senate investigation of intelligence abuses.
1977-78 -- House Select Committee on Assassinations
In a move researchers call breathtaking, the CIA appointed Joannides himself as its liaison to the HSCA[21][22][41] -- putting the very officer who ran the DRE in charge of what documents the committee received. Joannides slow-walked document production and concealed his own involvement. Chief Counsel Robert Blakey later said he felt "snookered" by the CIA.
1994-98 -- ARRB
The CIA withheld Joannides's personnel file from the Review Board[9][21]. Seventeen months of DRE monthly reports[9][21] were claimed not to exist.
2003-2019 -- Morley v. CIA
Journalist Jefferson Morley filed suit in federal court[39][41] seeking Joannides's files. The CIA fought the lawsuit for 16 years. Federal appellate courts repeatedly rejected the CIA's arguments.
July 2025 -- Personnel File Released
Under pressure from the House Task Force on Declassification, the CIA released Joannides's full personnel file, confirming everything researchers had alleged[21][22].

The "Howard Gebler" Alias

A January 17, 1963, CIA memo in the released file showed Joannides was directed to obtain an alias and fake driver's license under the name[21][22] "Howard Gebler". For decades, the CIA had denied that Joannides was "Howard" -- the case officer name DRE members recalled for their CIA contact. The 2025 release proved the CIA's denials had been lies. Fact

Rep. Anna Paulina Luna, chair of the House Task Force, stated that the Joannides file revealed that "the CIA has been lying for 62 years about the assassination of an American President[21]."

Connections to Other Reports

The DRE and its role in anti-Castro operations are examined in Report 10: Cuban Exiles. Oswald's New Orleans activities and the Fair Play for Cuba Committee are detailed in Report 2: Lee Harvey Oswald. The HSCA investigation is analyzed in Report 1: The Warren Commission.

VIII. Angleton's Shadow: The Oswald 201 File

James Jesus Angleton, the CIA's legendary and paranoid chief of counterintelligence[42][15], personally maintained a classified 201 intelligence file on Lee Harvey Oswald for the four years preceding Kennedy's assassination. The handling of this file remains one of the most troubling aspects of the CIA's pre-assassination conduct. Strong Evidence

What We Know

Oswald first came to Angleton's attention in November 1959 following news reports of his defection to the Soviet Union. From that point forward:

The Central Question

The newly released documents sharpen a question that has haunted researchers for decades:

Was the CIA incredibly, atrociously, incompetent when it comes to Lee Harvey Oswald, or was Angleton actually running an operation involving Oswald? -- Larry Sabato, UVA Center for Politics, summarizing the documentary evidence

A declassified transcript from 1978 shows Angleton duping congressional investigators[52][53] by concealing that the CIA knew about Oswald's visit to the Cuban embassy in Mexico City before the assassination -- a visit the CIA publicly claimed it only discovered afterward. Strong Evidence

The Mexico City Surveillance

The 2025 releases significantly expanded the archive of CIA and FBI reporting on Oswald's September-October 1963 visit to Mexico City. Documents show both agencies monitored Oswald, intercepted phone calls[16][1], took photographs, and compiled memoranda about his activity. The CIA intercepted a phone call Oswald made to the Soviet Embassy from the Cuban Embassy. Fact

The records also revealed Operation LIENVOY -- a massive joint surveillance program[16] between the CIA and the Mexican government that was "initiated by the Mexican president, not the CIA." The Mexico City Station maintained branches targeting Soviet, Cuban, and Communist targets, using assets including "a Catholic priest" as a principal agent. Emerging

Connections to Other Reports

Oswald's Mexico City trip and the "mystery man" photograph are examined in Report 2: Lee Harvey Oswald and Report 8: CIA / Intelligence Community.

IX. FBI Foreknowledge: The Hosty Note and Hoover's Rush to Judgment

The Destroyed Note

In 1975, a devastating allegation emerged: FBI Agent James Hosty had destroyed a note from Lee Harvey Oswald[11][44][45][50] delivered to the FBI's Dallas Field Office one to two weeks before the assassination. Fact

The facts, as established through investigation:

The note's destruction eliminated evidence that could have shown the FBI was aware Oswald was making threats shortly before the assassination -- and failed to act on that information. Strong Evidence

Hoover's Immediate Narrative Control

Documents released during the Biden era included memos from FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover written mere hours after Oswald was shot[1][32] by Ruby, urging the government to release information to "convince the public that Oswald killed John F. Kennedy." This rush to cement a lone-gunman narrative -- before any thorough investigation had been conducted -- has been cited by researchers as evidence that the FBI's priority was controlling the story, not finding the truth. Strong Evidence

Connections to Other Reports

Ruby's murder of Oswald and its implications are analyzed in Report 6: Jack Ruby. Hoover's relationship with the Warren Commission is examined in Report 1: The Warren Commission.

X. Key Revelations from the 2025 Releases

Larry Sabato and his team at the UVA Center for Politics undertook a systematic review[17] of the 77,000+ pages released in March 2025. The National Security Archive at George Washington University conducted parallel analysis. Their combined findings paint a picture not of a single conspiracy revelation, but of a government riddled with hidden operations and institutional secrecy. Strong Evidence

The CIA's True Scale

A document written by Kennedy aide Arthur Schlesinger Jr. on Inauguration Day 1961 revealed that 47% of the political officers serving in United States embassies were CIA agents[17][15] under diplomatic cover. The CIA maintained approximately 3,900 operatives overseas[17], nearly matching the State Department's 3,700 personnel. In the Paris Embassy alone, 123 "diplomats" were actually CIA officers[17][15]. In Chile, 11 of 13 political officers were CIA. Fact

Widescale Mail Surveillance

A CIA document from January 1958 revealed that counterintelligence chief James Angleton reported "two or three hundred CIA employees are exclusively engaged[14]" in monitoring U.S. mail. By 1961, approximately 250,000 names were on the watch list[14], with 200,000 items screened monthly and 1,200 receiving "close scrutiny." The CIA also fabricated letters with counterfeit stamps to appear as though they came from North Vietnam and Beijing. Fact

CIA Espionage Against Allies

Declassified for the first time, formerly Top Secret FBI reports revealed that President Kennedy and Attorney General Robert Kennedy were briefed on a CIA counterintelligence operation to break into the French Embassy[14][15] in Washington for "the removal of documents." The CIA had also placed agents inside French intelligence. Fact

The "Family Jewels" Expanded

The JFK files revealed additional CIA "Family Jewels" -- operations that violated the agency's charter -- including unauthorized wiretapping of U.S. citizens, members of Congress[14], and high-profile dissidents, often targeting individuals "not for espionage, but for political dissent." Emerging

Assassination Operations

CIA Inspector General documents confirmed the agency provided weapons -- including "one small-size high-power weapon"[15] and pistols -- to the assassins of Dominican Republic President Rafael Trujillo in May 1961. Separate documents detailed the CIA's sugar contamination operation: injecting "a contaminating agent in Cuban sugar bound for the Soviet Union." Fact

Covert Operations Scale

Between January 1961 and fall 1962, the Special Group (the interagency body overseeing covert operations) approved approximately 550 covert operations[15][37]. The CIA employed 384 personnel in Washington and Miami focused on overthrowing Castro[15], maintaining 108 covert agents and assets on the island in 1963 and running "ten black operations per month." Fact

Ruby-Oswald Contact Allegation

A CIA memo noted that a source told investigators that Jack Ruby and Lee Harvey Oswald met at a nightclub[17] weeks before JFK was killed. While the veracity of this specific claim remains unverified, it was previously redacted from public view. Speculative

NARA 2025 Release: 104-10332-10023 and related files
UVA Center for Politics analysis: March 25, 2025
National Security Archive Briefing Books: March 19, March 28, April 7, 2025

XI. The Whistleblower: A Secret CIA Report About Tricking Congress

In November 2025, Axios reported a story that crystallized decades of researcher suspicion[23] about the CIA's approach to congressional oversight on the JFK case. Emerging

Thomas Pearcy's Account

Thomas L. Pearcy, a Latin America expert and history professor at Slippery Rock University[23] in Pennsylvania, came forward publicly for the first time. While serving as the joint historian for the CIA and State Department in 2009, Pearcy discovered a document in a CIA secure safe room that he described as approximately 50 pages long -- a CIA inspector general's report[23].

The report was essentially a "damage assessment" by the agency to determine how much its reputation had been harmed by the House Select Committee on Assassinations (HSCA), which investigated the assassination from 1976 to 1979. But what made it explosive was its tone:

The document effectively documented how CIA officers boasted about deceiving congressional investigators who were trying to determine the truth about a president's assassination. -- Summary of Thomas Pearcy's account, reported by Axios, November 19, 2025

This account is consistent with what declassified documents and the Joannides file have already established: that the CIA systematically deceived every body that investigated the assassination. But Pearcy's account suggests additional undisclosed documents -- including the inspector general's report itself and the Mexico City surveillance photographs -- that have never been released. Emerging

XII. The House Task Force on Declassification (2025)

A new institutional actor entered the JFK declassification fight in 2025. The House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform established the "Task Force on the Declassification of Federal Secrets," chaired by Rep. Anna Paulina Luna (R-FL), in January 2025[18][19][58]. Fact

First Hearing -- April 1, 2025

The task force's inaugural hearing focused on the 80,000+ pages released in March 2025.[18] The hearing featured Oliver Stone (34 years after his film helped create the JFK Records Act) and multiple researchers. Luna stated:

It has become apparent in this investigation that some factions of federal government did NOT want to be transparent. This type of perspective cannot exist in a free and fair society. -- Rep. Anna Paulina Luna, Chair, Task Force on Declassification of Federal Secrets

Second Hearing -- May 20, 2025

Titled "The JFK Files: Assessing Over 60 Years of the Federal Government's Obstruction, Obfuscation, and Deception,"[19][20] the second hearing featured Douglas Horne, the former ARRB military records analyst, who testified about the missing autopsy evidence. The hearing examined "fighting against the request for redactions" in newly declassified documents.

The Joannides File -- July 2025

The task force's most concrete achievement was securing the release of the George Joannides personnel file from the CIA in July 2025 -- the document that confirmed the "Howard Gebler" alias and the 62-year cover-up.

The task force also identified continuing gaps: the March 2025 release "does not include two-thirds of the promised files[8] nor any of 500-plus IRS records, nor any of the 2,400 recently discovered FBI files" at the time of the initial release. Fact

XIII. What Remains Hidden

Despite the language of "full and complete release," significant categories of JFK assassination records remain restricted or missing as of early 2026. Strong Evidence

Categories Still Restricted

Known Missing Records

The Digitization Failure

The National Archives promised to digitize the full 5-million-page collection[1] by late 2023 under President Biden's December 2021 directive. That deadline was missed with no updated timeline provided. Physical access to the non-digitized portions requires advance notice, limited appointment windows, and high copying fees -- barriers that effectively restrict access to well-funded researchers. Fact

The Watchdogs

XIV. The Researchers Who Forced Transparency

The declassification of JFK assassination records has not been a gift from the government. Every significant release was compelled by lawsuits, public pressure, congressional action, or journalistic investigation. These are the key figures and institutions that have driven the process.

Institutions

Mary Ferrell Foundation
Independent / Ipswich, MA
Operates the largest online database of JFK government records (2+ million searchable pages). Filed federal lawsuit in October 2022 challenging government noncompliance with the JFK Records Act[51]. Led by Rex Bradford[47].
National Security Archive
George Washington University
Independent research institute that collects and publishes declassified documents via FOIA. Published detailed briefing books analyzing the 2025 releases. Senior analyst Peter Kornbluh leads JFK-related work.
UVA Center for Politics
University of Virginia
Larry Sabato's team conducted systematic review of the 77,000+ pages released in March 2025, publishing "Ten Findings from the Newly-Released JFK Assassination Records."
AARC
Assassination Archives & Research Center
Long-running research organization that hosts conferences, publishes analysis, and maintains an archive of assassination-related documents and researcher materials.

Key Individuals

Jefferson Morley
JFK Facts (Substack) / Author
Journalist who sued the CIA in 2003 seeking Joannides files (Morley v. CIA, 16-year legal battle). Identified the nine declassified Angleton memos as "the most important collection that I've seen so far."
Rex Bradford
Mary Ferrell Foundation
President of MFF. Spent 25+ years scanning and analyzing declassified documents. Discovered "the erasure" in the LBJ-Hoover telephone conversation (the "Fourteen Minute Gap")[48]. Computer scientist turned archivist.
Peter Kornbluh
National Security Archive, GWU
Senior analyst who stated the JFK Records Act "has advanced public knowledge of CIA covert operations more than any other declassification[13] in the history of access to information."
Douglas Horne
Former ARRB Staff / Author
ARRB's chief military records analyst (1995-1998). Took depositions from 10 autopsy witnesses. Testified to Congress in May 2025 about missing medical evidence. Author of Inside the ARRB (5 volumes).
Larry Sabato
UVA Center for Politics
Political scientist whose team systematically reviewed the March 2025 document releases. Published detailed analysis of ten key findings in the Sabato Crystal Ball newsletter.
Thomas Pearcy
Slippery Rock University / CIA Whistleblower
Former joint CIA-State Department historian who discovered a secret CIA inspector general's report in 2009 and went public in November 2025 about CIA deception of Congress.

XV. The "Limited Hangout" Critique

Among researchers and transparency advocates, a persistent criticism has shadowed every document release: that the process has been structured as a limited hangout -- intelligence jargon for a deception tactic in which just enough truth is revealed to create an appearance of transparency, while the most damaging material remains hidden. Theoretical

The Concept

The term gained currency in the JFK context through Victor Marchetti, a former CIA officer turned whistleblower, who warned before the HSCA hearings that "Langley wasn't preparing to tell the truth. Instead, it was preparing to stage-manage the hearings using a deception tactic known in intelligence slang as a 'limited hangout.'"

The Evidence For

Researchers who advance this critique point to several patterns:

The Counterargument

Others argue the process, while frustratingly slow, has been genuinely productive. Peter Kornbluh's assessment is notable: the JFK Records Act "has advanced public knowledge of CIA covert operations more than any other declassification in the history of access to information." Without it, these files would "likely have stayed Top Secret for eternity." The fact that the CIA's own historian acknowledged a "cover-up" and that the Joannides file was eventually released suggests the system, however imperfect, is working -- just on a glacial timeline. Strong Evidence

Researchers like Morley and Bradford note that the true test isn't what has been released, but whether the missing records -- the IG report, the Mexico City photos, the DRE monthly reports -- will ever surface. If they do, the "limited hangout" critique may prove too cynical. If they don't, it may prove prescient.

These agencies have not been cooperative with the law, with Congress, or with anybody over the last 60 years[54]. Resistance to full disclosure is not going to stop because Trump issued an order. -- JFK assassination researchers, quoted by ABC News, January 2025

XVI. The Case For and Against Full Release

Why Full Transparency Is Warranted

The argument for complete declassification rests on several pillars:

What Agencies Argue

Intelligence agencies have consistently cited:

Harvard historian Fredrik Logevall, who reviewed the 2025 releases[28], noted they "provide enhanced clarity on CIA actions" while observing that the real significance may be not what they reveal about the assassination itself, but what they reveal about the culture of secrecy that pervades the national security state. Strong Evidence

XVII. How Document Releases Have Shifted Opinion

The progressive declassification of JFK records has had a measurable effect on both scholarly and public opinion over the past three decades. Strong Evidence

The Scholarly Shift

The declassified record has moved the mainstream historical consensus away from simple acceptance of the Warren Commission's findings and toward a more nuanced position. While no "smoking gun" document has emerged proving a conspiracy, the accumulated evidence of institutional deception has made it untenable for serious historians to dismiss all conspiracy concerns as unfounded:

This doesn't prove who killed Kennedy. But it proves beyond any doubt that the American public was systematically denied the information needed to make that determination. Fact

Public Opinion

Polling has consistently shown that a majority of Americans believe there was a conspiracy to assassinate President Kennedy. This belief has remained stable at approximately 60-70% for decades and has been reinforced, not diminished, by document releases that reveal the extent of government secrecy and deception.

The March 2025 releases generated enormous public interest and media coverage, though researchers noted that the sheer volume of material -- 77,000+ pages -- makes systematic review a long-term project. As of early 2026, analysis continues, and researchers expect additional significant findings to emerge as cross-referencing proceeds.

XVIII. Complete Declassification Timeline

1964
Warren Commission Report published. Supporting volumes released, but vast numbers of documents remain classified. CIA withholds Castro assassination plots and Joannides/DRE connection.
1975-76
Church Committee reveals CIA assassination plots. Hosty note destruction surfaces. CIA conceals Joannides connection again.
1976-79
HSCA investigation. CIA assigns Joannides as liaison, hiding his involvement. Angleton deceives investigators. Committee concludes "probable conspiracy."
December 1991
Oliver Stone's JFK released in theaters. Public outrage builds.
October 1992
President George H.W. Bush signs JFK Records Act. ARRB created. 25-year full-release deadline set for October 2017.
1994-1998
ARRB operates. Collects 5+ million pages. Takes autopsy depositions. Discovers Secret Service destroyed trip records in January 1995.
2003
Jefferson Morley sues CIA for Joannides files. Begins 16-year legal battle.
2013-2014
CIA historian David Robarge's "benign cover-up" article published internally (2013) and quietly declassified (2014).
October 2017
Legal deadline arrives. Trump releases 2,800 documents but defers thousands more under CIA/FBI pressure. Pompeo urges continued withholding.
2021-2023
Biden releases documents in three tranches (Oct 2021, Dec 2022, Apr-Jun 2023). Introduces "transparency plan" framework. ~98% declared public.
October 2022
Mary Ferrell Foundation files federal lawsuit challenging government noncompliance with JFK Records Act.
January 23, 2025
Trump signs Executive Order 14176 directing "full and complete release" of JFK, RFK, and MLK assassination records.
February 2025
FBI discovers 2,400 previously unknown JFK-related records in its own archives.
March 18-20, 2025
National Archives releases 77,100 pages in 2,343 PDF files -- previously redacted documents now published without redactions.
April 1, 2025
House Task Force on Declassification holds first hearing on JFK files. Oliver Stone testifies.
May 20, 2025
Second hearing: "Obstruction, Obfuscation, and Deception." Douglas Horne testifies about missing autopsy evidence.
July 2025
CIA releases George Joannides's full personnel file. "Howard Gebler" alias confirmed. 62-year cover-up exposed.
November 2025
CIA whistleblower Thomas Pearcy goes public about secret IG report boasting of deceiving Congress on JFK probe.
January 30, 2026
Additional 139 documents (11,022 pages) released. Analysis and lawsuits continue.

Key Researchers and Institutions

Jefferson Morley
JFK Facts / Author
16-year Morley v. CIA lawsuit; identified Joannides's role; author of Morley v. CIA: My Unfinished JFK Investigation; publisher of JFK Facts Substack.
Rex Bradford
Mary Ferrell Foundation
Built 2+ million page searchable archive; discovered LBJ-Hoover "14 Minute Gap"; leads MFF federal lawsuit; 25+ years of document analysis.
Peter Kornbluh
National Security Archive, GWU
Senior analyst; published National Security Archive briefing books on 2025 releases; key voice on CIA covert operations in Latin America.
Douglas Horne
Former ARRB Staff
ARRB chief military records analyst; 10 autopsy depositions; 2025 congressional testimony; author of 5-volume Inside the ARRB.
Larry Sabato
UVA Center for Politics
Political scientist; team systematically reviewed March 2025 release; published "Ten Findings" analysis.
David Robarge
CIA (Chief Historian)
Authored "benign cover-up" article (2013) acknowledging McCone/Helms withheld Castro assassination plots from Warren Commission.
Thomas Pearcy
Slippery Rock University
CIA whistleblower (2025); discovered secret IG report in CIA safe room in 2009; revealed CIA boasts of deceiving HSCA investigators.
Judge John Tunheim
Former ARRB Chairman
Led the ARRB 1994-1998; publicly stated in 2017 that nothing in remaining records justifies continued secrecy.

Sources

  1. National Archives, "JFK Assassination Records - 2025 Documents Release" (March 2025). archives.gov/research/jfk/release-2025
  2. National Archives, "JFK Assassination Records Review Board." archives.gov/research/jfk/review-board
  3. National Archives, "Background on the Collection." archives.gov/research/jfk/background
  4. ARRB Final Report, Executive Summary. sgp.fas.org/advisory/arrb98/part02.htm
  5. White House, "Declassification of Records Concerning the Assassinations..." Executive Order 14176 (January 23, 2025). whitehouse.gov
  6. White House, "Fact Sheet: President Donald J. Trump Orders Declassification of JFK, RFK, and MLK Assassination Files" (January 2025). whitehouse.gov
  7. Office of the Director of National Intelligence, "Previously-Classified President John F. Kennedy Assassination Collection Records Now Released" (March 2025). dni.gov
  8. Mary Ferrell Foundation, "State of JFK Releases 2025." maryferrell.org
  9. Mary Ferrell Foundation, "JFK Records Lawsuit." maryferrell.org
  10. Mary Ferrell Foundation, "Freeing the JFK Files." maryferrell.org
  11. Mary Ferrell Foundation, "Destruction of the Oswald Note." maryferrell.org
  12. Mary Ferrell Foundation, "The CIA and the JFK Assassination." maryferrell.org
  13. National Security Archive, "CIA Covert Ops: Kennedy Assassination Records Lift Veil of Secrecy" (March 19, 2025). nsarchive.gwu.edu
  14. National Security Archive, "JFK Papers Reveal CIA 'Family Jewels' Spying Operations in United States" (March 28, 2025). nsarchive.gwu.edu
  15. National Security Archive, "JFK Files: Revelations from the Covert Operations High Command" (April 7, 2025). nsarchive.gwu.edu
  16. National Security Archive, "JFK Files Detail Close Intelligence Collaboration Between CIA and Mexico" (May 19, 2025). nsarchive.gwu.edu
  17. UVA Center for Politics (Sabato's Crystal Ball), "Ten Findings from the Newly-Released JFK Assassination Records" (March 25, 2025). centerforpolitics.org
  18. House Committee on Oversight, "Rep. Luna Opens the Task Force on the Declassification of Federal Secrets' Hearing on the JFK Files." oversight.house.gov
  19. House Committee on Oversight, "Hearing Wrap Up: Task Force Examines Newly Released JFK Files." oversight.house.gov
  20. House Committee on Oversight, "Luna Opens Second Hearing on the JFK Assassination Files." oversight.house.gov
  21. Rep. Anna Paulina Luna, "Declassification Task Force Secures George Joannides CIA File, Revealing 62-Year CIA Cover-Up in JFK Assassination." luna.house.gov
  22. Axios, "CIA admits shadowy officer monitored Oswald before JFK assassination, new records reveal" (July 5, 2025). axios.com
  23. Axios, "Scoop: Secret CIA report boasted about tricking Congress in JFK probe, whistleblower says" (November 19, 2025). axios.com
  24. Axios, "Scoop: FBI finds secret JFK assassination records after Trump order" (February 10, 2025). axios.com
  25. Washington Post, "New CIA documents show more links to Lee Harvey Oswald, JFK case" (July 14, 2025). washingtonpost.com
  26. Washington Post, "Family secrets exposed as JFK files name long-hidden CIA assets" (March 22, 2025). washingtonpost.com
  27. Washington Post, "Trump delays release of some JFK assassination documents, bowing to national security concerns" (October 25, 2017). washingtonpost.com
  28. Harvard Gazette, "Declassified JFK files provide 'enhanced clarity' on CIA actions, historian says" (March 2025). news.harvard.edu
  29. CNN, "FBI says it has discovered new files on JFK assassination" (February 11, 2025). cnn.com
  30. CNN, "Trump administration releases new JFK assassination records" (March 18, 2025). cnn.com
  31. CBS News, "JFK files related to assassination released by Trump administration" (2025). cbsnews.com
  32. NBC News, "Latest batch of JFK assassination documents show Kennedy's distrust of the CIA" (March 2025). nbcnews.com
  33. NBC News, "Biden releases most JFK assassination records -- but withholds thousands" (December 2022). nbcnews.com
  34. PBS News, "Trump administration set to release JFK assassination files with no redactions." pbs.org
  35. Al Jazeera, "Trump releases more than 2,000 new JFK assassination files: What we know" (March 19, 2025). aljazeera.com
  36. Al Jazeera, "New JFK assassination files: What was revealed about Oswald and CIA plots?" (March 20, 2025). aljazeera.com
  37. Democracy Now, "Declassified JFK Assassination Files Expose Covert CIA Operations from the Vatican to Latin America" (March 21, 2025). democracynow.org
  38. Douglas P. Horne, Written Testimony to House Task Force on Declassification (May 20, 2025). oversight.house.gov (PDF)
  39. Jeff Morley, "From the New JFK Files: How a Top CIA Officer Lied About the Surveillance of Oswald" (JFK Facts Substack). jfkfacts.substack.com
  40. Jeff Morley, "JFK Autopsy Expert Douglas Horne Shares Disturbing Conclusions with Congress" (JFK Facts Substack). jfkfacts.substack.com
  41. Michael D. Sellers, "JFK Files: Do the New 'Joannides' Disclosures Change the Story?" (Substack). michaeldsellers.substack.com
  42. CovertAction Magazine, "James Angleton: JFK Assassination Architect?" (November 26, 2025). covertactionmagazine.com
  43. Wikipedia, "President John F. Kennedy Assassination Records Collection Act of 1992." en.wikipedia.org
  44. Wikipedia, "George Joannides." en.wikipedia.org
  45. Wikipedia, "James P. Hosty." en.wikipedia.org
  46. Wikipedia, "Executive Order 14176." en.wikipedia.org
  47. Rex Bradford / Mary Ferrell Foundation, "State of the JFK Releases 2025" (AARC presentation). aarclibrary.org
  48. Mary Ferrell Foundation, "The Fourteen Minute Gap." maryferrell.org
  49. Spartacus Educational, "George Joannides." spartacus-educational.com
  50. Spartacus Educational, "James P. Hosty." spartacus-educational.com
  51. Justia, "Mary Ferrell Foundation, Inc. v. Biden, No. 24-1606 (9th Cir. 2024)." law.justia.com
  52. UVA News/WVIR, "'Why were they keeping all this secret?' UVA team pores through JFK files" (March 29, 2025). 29news.com
  53. UVA Center for Politics, "JFK Records Reveal Intense Level of Secrecy by CIA During Investigation of Assassination." centerforpolitics.org
  54. University of Virginia News, "Declassified JFK Papers Reveal Intelligence Operations and Secrets." news.virginia.edu
  55. ABC News, "Government releases thousands of declassified pages related to JFK assassination." abcnews.com
  56. ABC News, "Oliver Stone calls on Congress to reopen JFK assassination investigation." abcnews.com
  57. The Nation, "JFK Assassination: The Final Secrets." thenation.com
  58. Paul Hastings LLP, "New Congressional Task Force on Federal Secrets Convenes First Hearing Focused on JFK Files." paulhastings.com
  59. Kennedys and King, "The War on Oliver Stone's JFK Records Act (Parts 1-3)." kennedysandking.com
  60. The Daily Beast, "CIA Admits Covering Up Lee Harvey Oswald Links Before JFK Assassination." thedailybeast.com