A 2025 declassified ARRB memo confirms internal doubts about one of the JFK autopsy’s most disturbing anomalies - the possibility that the brain preserved in the National Archives… wasn’t Kennedy’s.


🧾 The Brain That Didn’t Match the Wound

The newly released memo - dated 1997 but classified until now - shows forensic pathologist Dr. Gary Aguilar privately warning that the photos of JFK’s brain “don’t align with the expected trauma from a rear-entry shot.”

Autopsy photos show a nearly intact brain. But Kennedy’s actual injury, according to Parkland doctors and Bethesda witnesses, left a massive defect in the rear of his skull.

So whose brain was photographed?


🕵️ The “Substitution” Memo

A second document, marked “Sensitive Routing – Do Not Copy”, outlines an internal inquiry into a theory floated by a Navy medical technician: that the brain was switched after the initial exam.

Key quote:

“Specimen appears heavier than average postmortem brain, suggesting lack of trauma and excess preservation fluid.”

The technician was never interviewed again.

His testimony? Buried in an appendix - now finally released.


🧪 A Bullet, A Stretch, A Change in History

In 2023, former Secret Service agent Paul Landis revealed he had recovered a bullet from the limo and placed it on JFK’s stretcher at Parkland Hospital - a bullet that wasn’t logged.

The 2025 files confirm: the bullet was found, but not entered into evidence. It’s mentioned in a sidebar report sent to FBI Director Hoover.

If true, it shatters the “single bullet theory” completely.


🚫 Autopsy Interrupted

New security logs show unauthorized Navy personnel entered the autopsy suite between 8:45 and 9:05 PM on Nov. 22, while the body was unattended.

ALSO READ:  The Autopsy That Raised More Questions Than It Answered

There’s no official reason given.

One log entry simply reads:

“Body repositioned for secondary imaging. Orders unclear.”


🧩 Someone Rebuilt the Narrative - Piece by Piece

The 2025 medical documents don’t just raise questions. They show evidence was manipulated, removed, or replaced.

A second brain.

A bullet never logged.

And a wound description that changed depending on who was allowed in the room.