This Might Be the Most Interesting Find in the JFK Files So Far

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by Matt Margolis, PJ Media:

President Trump wasted no time delivering on his promise of transparency during his first week back in office, signing an executive order demanding full disclosure of files related to the John F. Kennedy, Robert F. Kennedy, and Martin Luther King Jr. assassinations.

This week, the JFK files were released, and perhaps the unvarnished truth about this pivotal event in American history that the deep state has kept hidden for decades will be revealed.

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“President Trump is ushering in a new era of maximum transparency,” Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard said in a statement. “Today, per his direction, previously redacted JFK Assassination Files are being released to the public with no redactions.”

While the Warren Commission tried selling us the fairy tale that Lee Harvey Oswald acted alone, many Americans have rightfully questioned this conclusion, given the obvious discrepancy between Oswald’s position and the kill shot’s trajectory.

It may take a while for experts and people with more time and patience than I do to cull through the documents, but one document that was part of the release has been getting a lot of attention on social media.

The document is about Gary Underhill, a CIA special assignments operative who dropped a major bombshell the day after Kennedy’s assassination. This wasn’t some conspiracy theorist in a tin foil hat—Underhill was a World War II military intelligence veteran and former Life magazine photojournalist who was linked to high-ranking CIA officials.

On November 23, 1963, a clearly disturbed Underhill made a desperate journey from D.C. to New Jersey to warn friends about a “small clique within the CIA” being responsible for Kennedy’s death. A memo with the subject line “Ramparts” (the name of a magazine that featured investigations of the CIA) notes that friends described him as “sober but badly shook.”

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