One of the most overlooked documents in the 2025 files is a blank passport application found in Oswald’s New Orleans file - stamped approved with no signature and no travel record. The destination was redacted. The date was October 1963.


🧾 A Passport With No Owner

The newly declassified FBI file titled “LHO–NO–TRVL” includes a photocopy of an unsigned passport application with an approval stamp dated October 3, 1963 - the same week Oswald was allegedly preparing his trip to Mexico.

The problem? His official passport had already been issued two years earlier.

This one had a different ID number.

No photo attached.

And no record of cancellation.


📍 The Redacted Destination

The most heavily blacked-out portion of the document is the destination box. But a routing slip attached to the file lists one legible keyword: “Caracas.”

Why would Oswald - or someone using his identity - have a travel document approved to Venezuela just weeks before the assassination?

And why wasn’t it logged by State?


🗃️ Internal Alarm That Went Nowhere

A 1964 interoffice CIA memo now made public refers to the passport as “unauthorized parallel documentation.”

Another line states:

“Appears to have been issued through private contact within Agency field team.”

The note ends with:

“Item not helpful to Commission proceedings. File separate.”

Translation: it was real, it was flagged, and it was suppressed.


🕴️ False Identity Or Quiet Extraction?

The CIA memo raises one final, chilling theory - handwritten in the margins:

“Check MEX-CUB asset crossover. Possible double op.”

It’s the only surviving note linking the rogue passport to the possibility of a second Oswald - or a planned exit route that never came.

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📦 The Paper Trail Led Out Of Dallas

The official record shows Oswald never left the country after Mexico City.

This document suggests someone planned for him to.

Or for someone else using his name.

And in 1963, that was enough to get a passport.