Within the 2025 declassified document 206-10001-10009 lies a quiet psychological profile note regarding Oswald’s “conditioning response to isolation.” The phrase is buried in a report assessing his post-defection behavior, but its implications are anything but minor....
Document 194-10002-10187, from the 2025 JFK file release, contains a damning piece of paper: a brief 1961 cable from the U.S. Embassy in Moscow stating it had “no objection” to Lee Harvey Oswald returning to the United States. At a time when Cold War paranoia ran high...
2025 files confirm what many suspected: the visual record of JFK’s wounds was deliberately manipulated before being archived. 🧠 Introduction: The Photos Never Matched the Wounds Researchers and doctors have long noted that the autopsy photos don’t align with: Early...
Document 180-10131-10325, released in the 2025 JFK files, contains firsthand commentary from Soviet officials responding to U.S. inquiries about Lee Harvey Oswald’s time in the USSR. The verdict from Moscow was firm: Oswald was isolated, distrusted, and ultimately...
Buried in document 206-10001-10009, declassified in 2025, is a low-profile but explosive reference to an internal memo describing a page “of cryptic personal notations” found among Oswald’s possessions after his arrest. This page, which allegedly contained references...
Document 206-10001-10000, newly released as part of the 2025 JFK files, is just one page long. It outlines a suspicious disappearance: a Soviet defector scheduled to leave Mexico City who seemingly never did. The CIA flagged the irregularity. Then they closed the...