How the Oswald Case Became a Bureaucratic Burden

How the Oswald Case Became a Bureaucratic Burden

In the weeks following President Kennedy’s assassination, government agencies scrambled to trace Lee Harvey Oswald’s movements, motives, and official interactions. But by March 1964, as shown in document 194-10012-10400, some officials weren’t looking for answers-they...
Feature: When The CIA & KGB Both Watched Oswald & Looked Away

Feature: When The CIA & KGB Both Watched Oswald & Looked Away

He defected to Russia. Then came back. Everyone watched. No one acted. In the world of Cold War espionage, defectors were never left alone. Especially not those who played both sides. Lee Harvey Oswald was one of those men. And according to newly released JFK files...
The Memo That Wanted the Oswald File Closed Fast

The Memo That Wanted the Oswald File Closed Fast

In document 194-10012-10400, released as part of the 2025 JFK files, a mid-level U.S. official expresses clear frustration over lingering attention to Lee Harvey Oswald’s passport and embassy file. The request is simple: close it, bury it, and move on. But the...
The Foreign Files: How Allied Intelligence Tried to Warn the U.S.

The Foreign Files: How Allied Intelligence Tried to Warn the U.S.

Newly declassified cables show British, French, and Israeli intelligence flagged Oswald-and concerns about a wider plot-before the shots were fired in Dallas. 🌍 Outside Eyes on an Inside Threat U.S. agencies weren’t the only ones watching Oswald. In the early 1960s,...