MEDIA ADVISORY – Effort to release remaining sealed JFK
assassination records
This is to advise you of the growing public response to the
decision by the National Archives and Records Administration (NARA )
to remove the records on the assassination of President Kennedy from the 2013 National
Declassification Center
review process.
Because of the tremendous public outcry over the sealing of
the assassination records following the release of Oliver Stone’s movie “JFK,” Congress
passed the JFK Assassination Records Collection Act of 1992 creating the JFK
Assassination Records Collection at the NARA
and ordered all of the agencies of government to turn over their relevant assassination
records and open them to the public.
President Obama’s first action as president on December 29,
2009 was to initiate a policy of transparency and open government with
Executive Order 13526, that requires the accelerated declassification of the
backlog of secret government records by 2013, the 50th anniversary
of the assassination of the President.
The NARA originally said
that because of the intense public interest in the issue, the JFK assassination
records would be included in the process, but in a recent letter to James
Lesar, the director of the Assassination Archives and Research Center in
Washington D.C., the counsel to the NARA
reversed their earlier decision and said, “Given this public interest, we have
been consulting with the CIA to see if it
would be possible to review and release any of these remaining documents in
time for the 50th anniversary of President Kennedy’s assassination
in 2013. Although the CIA shares the NARA ’s
interest in wanting to be responsive to your request, they have concluded there
are substantial logistical requirements that must take place prior to the
release of these remaining records and there is simply not sufficient time or
resources to complete these tasks prior to 2017. Accordingly, we will not be
able to accommodate your request.”
In response, hundreds of historians, researchers and
ordinary citizens, both conspiracy theorists and Warren Commission supporters
alike, have protested this decision signing an on-line petition, which reads: “We
the undersigned call for the release of still secret JFK
assassination records at the National Archives before the
50th Anniversary of that tragedy in November 2013. The National Archives
has reneged on a 2010 promise to the public to release thousands of secret JFK
assassination records by the end of 2013, contrary to President Obama's commitment
to have the most open administration in history. Honor President
Obama's commitment by releasing these historic records by November
2013.”
In 2006, the CIA made a
preemptory release of all documents that were postponed until 2010, which shows
that they do have the logistical ability to release such records, and thus, the
remaining 1171 CIA documents that are
scheduled for release in 2017, can and should be reviewed and released as part
of the 2013 National Declassification
Center process.
Jefferson Morley wrote an article about it in Salon: http://www.salon.com/2012/06/14/national_archives_no_new_jfk_docs/singleton/
Bill Kelly has posted Lesar’s letter and the NARA
reponse at his blog:
http://jfkcountercoup.blogspot.com/2012/06/nara-continues-withholding-of-jfk.html
http://jfkcountercoup.blogspot.com/2012/06/nara-continues-withholding-of-jfk.html
Russ Baker – Is The Government Holding Back Crucial
Documents?
For further information contact:
Jim Lesar, Esq. jhlesar@gmail.com
(202) 393-1921 (301)
328-5920
John Judge – (202) 583-5347 or (202) 277-1992
Bill Kelly – (609) 425-6297 billkelly3@gmail.com
The Assassination Archives and Research Center (AARC) press
release: http://aarclibrary.org/
National Archives Decides to Withhold Records Related to the
Assassination of President John F. Kennedy - Declines Request for 50th
Anniversary Declassification Project
The National Archives today refused the request of a Washington
non-profit public interest group to declassify secret records related to the
assassination of President John F. Kennedy in time for the 50th
anniversary of that tragic event in 2013 (see attached 6/12/12 letter of Gary Stern, General Counsel
of the National Archives). The Archives reversed a commitment by Assistant
Archivist Michael Kurtz made at an Archives public forum in 2010 at which time
he stated the remaining secret Kennedy assassination records would be released
by the end of 2013. The Archives today says that Kurtz “misspoke” when he made
that commitment to the public.
Kurtz’ promise to process the secret JFK related documents
fulfilled President Obama’s expressed desire that his administration be the
most open in history. Today’s reversal of release of these records defeats
President Obama’s pledge that his be the most open administration in history.
The National Archives states that it does not know the
extent of secret files in its collection related to the Kennedy assassination,
but that CIA is withholding 1, 171
classified documents related to the assassination. The Archive’s acknowledges
that in 2006 the CIA speeded up releases of
documents with releases dates through 2010, but that CIA
declines to do so for the remaining documents due to “logistical requirements”
even though, according to the National Archives, only 1, 171 CIA
documents of undetermined volume remain to be declassified.
The request for release of the secret documents was made by
the Assassination Archives and Research Center (AARC), a Washington ,
D.C. non-profit public interest group in a
letter signed by several of its board members and attorneys Mark Zaid, Charles
Sanders and Prof. G. Robert Blakey, who served as the chief counsel of the
House Select Committee on Assassinations. The letter made the point that the 50th
anniversary of the Kennedy assassination in 2013 will result in widespread
discussion and news coverage, and that the government documents related to the
assassination should be made public in order for a fully informed discussion.
DC FOIA Attorney Dan Alcorn says:
“Researchers have started an online petition to obtain
release of secret files related to the assassination of President Kennedy in
1963. In 2010 Asst. Archivist of the United States Michael Kurtz promised
researchers that the secret records would be processed by the end of 2013 as
part of the government's effort to declassify hundreds of millions
of secret files. Recently the Archives reversed Kurtz' commitment,
claiming that he had misspoken, and instead the Archives has informed
researchers that the secret JFK files will not be processed for release until
2017 at the earliest. It is possible the files will remain secretly
indefinitely.”
“Researchers are seeking release of
Kennedy assassination files before the 50th anniversary of that tragic event in
November 2013. The JFK assassination has been the subject of
repeated government investigations and books and other literary treatments that
have come to conflicting conclusions about the assassination. The
American public by large majority believes the JFK assassination was the result
of a conspiracy, while the official Warren Commission report in 1964 asserted
that the assassination was the act of a lone gunman. Researchers believe
that 50 years of government secrecy surrounding the topic is enough, and that
all the records should be released before the 50th anniversary.
Researchers assert that the interests of the United
States would be best served by full
transparency on the topci in 2013 rather than have the anniversary occur amid
charges of secrecy and cover up. The issue is whether the government
today can be open and transparent on the violent removal of a President in
1963.”
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