They Killed JFK—and They’re Still Hiding Something!
They Killed JFK—and They’re Still Hiding Something!
Sixty-two years after John F. Kennedy’s assassination, the truth remains elusive—but the 2025 JFK files, finally unredacted under the Trump Administration, shine a glaring light on the CIA’s dirty laundry. File 157-10014-10242 is a smoking gun of deception: secret plots with Mafia mobsters to kill Fidel Castro, buried from the Warren Commission’s prying eyes. The CIA teamed up with underworld figures like Sam Giancana and John Roselli, scheming to poison or shoot Castro as part of Operation Mongoose. They failed—but did their meddling ricochet onto Kennedy’s motorcade in Dallas?

The file reveals more: evidence of Cuban retaliation plans against these CIA plots, whispers from Havana that Castro knew and might’ve struck back. Yet the agency withheld this from the Warren Commission, letting Oswald take the fall as a lone gunman. Speaking of Oswald, other files—like 104-10332-10022—show the CIA tracked him obsessively from Moscow to Mexico City, monitoring his every move with Soviet and Cuban contacts. They claim they saw no threat coming on November 22, 1963. Really? With that much surveillance, how did they miss it—or did they choose to look away?

This isn’t just incompetence; it’s a cover-up. The CIA’s own documents prove they hid their Mafia ties and Cuban secrets, leaving us to wonder: if they could obscure that in ‘63, what else have they buried over six decades? They’ve had time to refine their game, shielded by “classified” stamps while the public gropes in the dark. The Warren Commission swallowed their half-truths, and for years, they’ve dodged accountability. These new files—over 63,000 pages released on March 18, 2025—scream suspicion, not innocence.
Take James McCord, Jr., a CIA man from 1951 to 1970. A 1966 memo praises his technical skills, but he later masterminded the Watergate break-in. Coincidence? Maybe—but it’s another thread in the CIA’s tangled web of influence. They’ve meddled globally—coups in Iran, Guatemala—and these files hint at a rogue streak. If they botched their Castro hit and sparked a deadly backlash, who’s to say they didn’t orchestrate—or at least enable—JFK’s murder and walk free?

Thankfully, Trump’s transparency push is cracking open this crypt. On March 17, 2025, he ordered every JFK file unredacted, exposing the CIA’s grubby fingerprints. It’s a new dawn, unearthing America’s past sins—but is it enough? The agency’s still kicking, and these revelations don’t jail anyone. They got away with it then; what’s stopping them now? We’re not sheeple—we’re awake, demanding answers. The CIA’s chessboard is exposed, but the game’s not over. These files are a start—let’s keep digging before history repeats itself.
REFERENCES:
- 157-10014-10242
- Source: National Archives, JFK Assassination Records Collection, 2025 Release (March 18, 2025).
- Description: A Church Committee memo discussing Fidel Castro’s denial of involvement in JFK’s assassination, evidence of Cuban retaliation plans against CIA plots, and the CIA’s withholding of this information from the Warren Commission. It confirms CIA collaboration with Mafia figures (e.g., Sam Giancana, John Roselli) in assassination attempts on Castro under Operation Mongoose.
- Relevance: Supports claims of CIA-Mafia plots, secrecy from the Warren Commission, and the speculative “backfire” theory about Cuban retaliation.
- 104-10332-10022
- Source: National Archives, JFK Assassination Records Collection, 2025 Release (March 18, 2025).
- Description: A CIA document detailing the agency’s surveillance of Lee Harvey Oswald from 1959 to 1963, including his activities in Moscow, Mexico City, and contacts with Soviet and Cuban officials. It shows extensive monitoring but no indication the CIA predicted the assassination.
- Relevance: Backs the claim that the CIA “monitored Oswald like hawks” yet failed—or chose not—to act, fueling suspicion of incompetence or selective disclosure.
Additional Notes on References:
- James McCord, Jr. Reference: The article mentions a 1966 CIA memo praising McCord’s technical skills (fluoroscopic scanning) and his Watergate role. This isn’t tied to a specific 2025 file in the provided subset (e.g., 104-10224-10006 wasn’t available for verification), but his CIA tenure (1951–1970) and Watergate involvement (1972) are historical facts per sources like the Washington Post (March 20, 2025). A related memo exists in the broader JFK collection, but I didn’t cite a specific file number since it wasn’t directly quoted.
- 2025 Release Context: The Trump Administration’s order to release over 63,000 pages on March 17, 2025, is documented by the National Archives and PBS News (March 18, 2025), providing the backdrop for these files’ availability.
These two files—157-10014-10242 and 104-10332-10022—are the backbone of my piece, directly supporting my key claims.