NEW FILES SUPPORT OSWALD-RUBY LINK
AND CONTRADICT CIA DENIALS ABOUT OSWALD DEBRIEFING
Extract from
Professor John Newman's testimony to Rep. Conyer's governmental oversight
committee on
There are, I
believe, troubling aspects surrounding the allegations of an association
between Oswald and his murderer Jack Ruby. It is troubling not because such
allegations can be proven or not, but because they reveal dramatic gaps,
contradictions and possible deliberate obfuscation in the official records of
this case.
Allow me to
illustrate this point. John Franklin Elrod, an unfortunate alcoholic who
happened to be walking along the railroad tracks not far from where Kennedy was
shot on
Elrod claimed
Oswald spoke of a meeting he had attended with Miller and Jack Ruby in which a
"contract" was discussed and money changed hands. The FBI report
which went to
Another
Why did the Dallas
FBI bureau conceal Elrod's 22 November incarceration in the
Did the CIA,
contrary to decades of denials, debrief Oswald? The new release of files
pursuant to the Records Act strengthens the evidentiary base for the
proposition that the CIA did in fact debrief Oswald. Of particular note is the
fact that the Chief of the CIA's Soviet Realities Branch -- in the Soviet
Russia Division of the Directorate of Plans -- wanted to lay on interviews of
Oswald at the time of the re-defector's return to the US in the Summer of 1962
-- a fact he recorded in a memorandum for the record three days after the
assassination.
The House Select
Committee rather foolishly ignored this memo simply because of a typographical
error. Thanks to the JFK Records Act, we have a much more complete version of
this memo, and what is new is that it was the Chief of the Soviet Realities
Branch or "SR 6" who wrote it. This branch was responsible, among
other things, for creating - to use spy jargon, "painting" - covers
or 'legends' for sleeper agents in the
In addition, a memo
from James Angleton's CIA mole hunting unit, the CI/SIG -- which stands for
Counterintelligence Special Investigations Group -- has surfaced in these files
with handwriting on it which gives the name of a CIA Domestic Contact Division
employee -- a name which appears to be one 'Andy' Anderson -- as a CIA contact
for Harvey Oswald. This document -- which, like the SR 6 document, was in a
"soft file" meaning it was not in the original Oswald 201 file --
confirms the recollections of other Clandestine Services employees that Andy
Anderson did in fact debrief Oswald. Don Deneselya, who worked in the Russian
Branch, Foreign Documents Division, Office of Contacts [OO/
There is nothing
conspiratorial about the fact that the ClA debriefed Lee Harvey Oswald. They
should have. That was their job. The debrief was
routine. The troubling aspect is why the CIA has doggedly denied a debrief ever took place. The answer to this question has
really been available all along, and the answer is that this denial is part of
a broader lie the Agency has been telling for decades: that they were not
interested in Oswald.
This false
statement of no interest in Oswald was not advanced to hide a routine debrief
-- an act which the Agency did do -- but to excuse the Agency for an act it
failed to do, namely, to launch a counterintelligence investigation of Oswald
at the time of his defection to Russia. This failure was deeply troubling to
the House Select Committee, which probed the Agency vigorously but
unsuccessfully on this question. For 14 months the ClA failed to properly
investigate Oswald, a man who left the U-2 spy base in
Thus the debrief
story is integral to the larger enigma of why, in the case of Lee Harvey
Oswald, the CIA was apparently asleep at the switch for 14 months. Perhaps
because of the CIA's interest in and contact with Oswald the Agency panicked
when President Kennedy was assassinated. Perhaps the cables indicating Oswald
had announced his intent to commit espionage were "lost," thus
explaining the Agency's failure to do its job. Perhaps.
Perhaps indeed, but perhaps not. I think it prudent to
reserve judgment until we have all of the CIA's materials. One thing is
certain: These new files make it clear that the CIA's past denials of interest
in and contact with Oswald are not true.