Newly declassified files reveal a buried report about an aide who attempted to leak post-assassination documents to the press-and was never seen again.
šļø The Ghost Employee
Eliot Fieldingās name was never part of the JFK story.
Thereās no mention of him in any previous investigation.
No news coverage. No interviews. No obituary.
But in the 2025 archive, he appears-once.
A Secret Service internal log, dated December 3, 1963, reads:
āFielding was seen removing carbon duplicates from WHC-5 file safe. Subject flagged. Briefed and relocated.ā
Thatās it.
No follow-up. No second entry. No record of what happened after that day.
šļø File: āIncident Report ā WHC Clearance Breach, 12/3/63ā
The logbook-unclassified in 2025-details the following:
- Fielding accessed restricted files tied to JFKās intelligence briefings
- He was seen photocopying documents marked āOFFICE OF COVERT RESPONSEā
- He told another staffer: āIf the public knew whatās in these, theyād burn down Langley.ā
That staffer, name redacted, described him as āpanicked but lucid.ā
šµ The Call to Langley
A second document shows a secure call from White House Chief of Staffās office to the CIA duty officer less than an hour after the breach.
The call log notation:
āSecurity incident ā internal. Request rapid containment.ā
By 3:45 p.m., Fielding was escorted from the premises by two men in civilian suits.
He never returned to work.
His badge was marked āarchived.ā
š§¾ Where He Went: Nowhere
A background search of Fielding revealed:
- No home address
- No tax record
- No employment history before 1963
- No death certificate
His security file is stamped: āERASED ā INTERNAL AUTHORIZATION 64-AX/SHADOWā
š§ What He May Have Seen
The file cabinet he accessed contained early drafts of:
- JFKās post-Bay of Pigs CIA restructuring orders
- Internal debate on withdrawing from Vietnam
- Memos discussing the possible reduction of nuclear first-strike doctrine
If any of this leaked in December 1963-it could have shifted the national narrative.
Instead, Fielding vanished.
š Whistleblowers Arenāt Always Heard-Sometimes Theyāre Deleted
Eliot Fieldingās story was never told.
Because the people who write history removed his name from the pages.
But the 2025 files brought him back.
And now, so will we.