Copies of Secret Service records, thought to be among those
files destroyed by the Secret Service in 1995, have been located among the
personal records of former agent Gerald Blaine and turned over to the NARA
for public release.
Like the Air Force One radio tapes found among the estate files of General Chester Clifton, these records from Blaine’s papers offer more proof that there are still previously unknown records out there that
can be located, added to the public record and fill in the missing pieces to
the Dealey Plaza puzzle.
Gerald Blaine, author of the book “The Kennedy Detail,” which is being made into a major motion
picture, first called attention to the record in his book. In “The Kennedy Detail” Blaine said
that he has boxes of copies of the Secret Service Advance Reports for Tampa
and Chicago that the Secret Service
said were destroyed after the ARRB requested them.
“The Kennedy Detail” (p.357):
“It had been a long time, but Blaine
was compelled to pull out his files to make sure is memory was serving him
correctly. Like any good investigator, he had kept all his personal reports for
all these years. Every time they moved to a new house, with his various jobs, (his
wife) Joyce had asked him why couldn’t he throw all that stuff out, but he’d
insisted the boxes were important. He found the box from 1963 and started going
through it. It was all there. Pages and pages of information that refuted all
the claims this guy (Abraham Bolden) was making. He was holding in his hands
the Tampa advance report that had
supposedly been destroyed.”
After notifying the NARA
of Mr. Blaine’s remarks, I received a note:
“Mr. Kelly, I just wanted to let you know that last week we
received a file of records from Mr. Blaine, some of which document the Tampa
trip. We will be conducting archival processing (re-foldering/boxing) of
the files and adding them to the Collection in the near future. We appreciate
the heads up that led us to contact Mr. Blaine.”
Sincerely,
Chief, Special Access and FOIA Branch
National Archives at College Park
In “Legacy of Secrecy”
(p. 766, Counterpoint Press, 2008) Lamar Waldron and Thom Hartmann called attention to these records when they wrote, “In
November 1994, the authors informed the Review Board very generally about JFK’s
1963 plans for a coup in Cuba, without revealing Almeida, and about the attempt
to kill JFK in Tampa four days before Dallas. Six weeks later, the Review Board
learned that – in violation of the JFK Act – the Secret Service had just
destroyed files covering JFK’s Tampa
trip, and other important files. That destruction would not become public
knowledge until 1998, and even today, most members of Congress remain unaware
of it.”
Doug Horne, the chief analyst for military records of the
Assassination Records Review Board (ARRB) wrote more extensively about the
deliberate destruction of Secret Service records in his book, “Inside the ARRB”
(2009, Volume V, p. 1451)
HORNE:
THE DESTRUCTION OF KEY DOCUMENTS BY THE SECRET SERVICE IN 1995
SUGGESTED THAT THE SECRET SERVICE COVER-UP OF ITS OWN MALFEASANCE CONTINUED,
MORE THAN 30 YEARS AFTER THE ASSASSINATION
In 1995, the Review Board Staff became aware that the U.S.
Secret Service had destroyed protective survey reports related to John F.
Kennedy’s Presidency, and that they had done so well after the passage of the
JFK Records Act, and well after having been briefed by the National Archives (NARA )
on the Act’s requirements to preserve all Assassination Records from
destruction until the ARRB had made a determination that any such proposed
destruction was acceptable
I reported to work at the ARRB on August 7, 1995 , and I still distinctly recall that this
controversy was raging full force during the first two weeks I was on the job.
I recall both General Counsel Jeremy Gunn and Executive Director David Marwell
being particularly upset; they were seriously considering holding public
hearings in which the Secret Service officials responsible for said destruction
would be called to account and castigated, in an open forum, with the media
present. The thinking at the time was that doing so would: (a) cause the Secret
Service to take the Review Board and the JFK Act seriously; and (b) send a
warning to other government agencies, such as the FBI and CIA ,
to also take the Review Board and the JFK Act seriously, lest they, too be
dragged into public hearings that would cause great discomfiture and
professional embarrassment.
Eventually – and unfortunately – tempers cooled and no
public hearings were held. I suspect that Board Chair Jack Tunheim played a
major role in finessing the matter; presumably, the Board Members believed that
since the ARRB was still in its first year of its three-year effort to locate
and review assassination records, that we would get more out of the Secret
Service in the future with honey, than with vinegar. Stern official letters
levying charges and counter-charges were exchanged; a face-to-face meeting
between high-level officials of the ARRB and Secret Service was held; tempers
cooled; and no public hearings were ever held. Relations with the Secret
Service remained testy throughout the remainder of the ARRB’s lifespan. It was
my impression, during my ongoing discussions with my fellow analysts on the
Secret Service Records team for the next three years (from September 1995 to
September 1998), that the Secret Service never “loosened up” and reached a
comfortable working accommodation with the ARRB like the FBI, the CIA ,
and the Pentagon (or, at least the Joint Staff Secretariat) did. The Secret
Service and the ARRB remained wary adversaries for four years.
The Review Board itself consciously soft-pedaled the dispute
in its Final Report, devoting only one paragraph (and virtually no details
whatsoever) to the incident, on page 149:
Congress passed the JFK Act in 1992. One month later, the
Secret Service began its compliance efforts. However, in January 1995, the
Secret Service destroyed Presidential protection survey reports for some of
President Kennedy’s trips in the fall of 1963. The Review Board learned of the
destruction approximately one week after the Secret Service destroyed them,
when the Board was drafting its request for additional information. The Board
believed that the Secret Service files on the President’s travel in the weeks
preceding this murder would be relevant.
And that was it – that was the only mention of the entire
imbroglio in the Final Report of the Assassinations Records Review Board. My
intention here is to give the reader as much additional and relevant,
information as I can at this writing, 14 years later. I was never “on the
inside” of this problem, but I do have a correspondence file of letters
exchanged, and will quote from them liberally to give the reader a sense of
what it feels and sounds like when two bureaucracies go to war inside the
Beltway. This is of more than mere academic interest, since the evidence
presented in this chapter has shown that several Secret Service officials on
the White House Detail were complicit in both the President’s death – due to
willful actions that greatly lessened the physical security around President
Kennedy during the Dallas motorcade – and in the coverup of the damage to the
limousine, which if left in its original damaged condition, would have proved
JFK was caught in a crossfire, and therefore killed by a conspiracy.
A Summary of the Records Destroyed by the Secret Service in
January of 1995.
The Protective Survey Reports destroyed by the Secret
Service in January 1995 were part of a group of records transferred by the
Secret Service to the General Services Administration’s Washington
National Records
Center in Suitland ,
Maryland on August 7, 1974 under accession number 87-75-4. The
instructions on the SF-135 (“Records Transmittal and Receipt” form) were:
“Retain permanently for eventual transfer to the National Archives or a
Presidential Library.” There were six boxes transferred under the accession
number, and the two that were destroyed in January of 1995 contained the following
files:
-
Andrews Air Force Base 1961 (Arrivals and Departures)
-
Andrews Air Force Base 1962 (Arrivals and Departures)
-
Andrews Air Force Base 1963 (Arrivals and Departures)
-
Arlington National
Cemetery
-
Camp David
-
The Capitol
-
Churches
-
D.C. National Guard Armory
-
D.C. Stadium
-
Departures from South Grounds
-
Dulles International
Airport
-
Embassies
-
Executive Office
Building
-
Golf Clubs
-
Griffith
Stadium
-
Homes of Friends
-
International Inn
-
Mayflower Hotel (three folders, for 1961-63)
-
National Press Club
-
Other Places Folders (#s 1-4, from January
1961-December of 1962)
-
Duluth , Minnesota
(9-24-63 )
-
Ashland , Wisconsin
(9-24-63 )
-
Billings , Montana
(9-25-63 )
-
Grand Teton National Park ,
Wyoming (9-25-63 )
-
Cheyenne , Wyoming
(9-25-63 )
-
Grand Forks , North
Dakota (9-25-63 )
-
Laramie , Wyoming
(9-25-63 )
-
Salt Lake City , Utah
(9-26-63 )
-
Great Falls , Montana
(9-26-63 )
-
Hanford , Washington
(9-26-63 )
-
Tongue Point , Oregon
(9-27-63 )
-
Redding , California
(9-27-63 )
-
Tacoma , Washington
(9-27-63 )
-
Palm Springs , California
(9-28-63 )
-
Las Vegas , Nevada
(9-28-63 )
-
Heber Springs , Arkansas
(10-3-63 )
-
Little Rock , Arkansas
(10-3-63 )
-
University of
Maine (10-19-63 )
-
Boston , Massachusetts
(10-26-63 )
-
Amherst , Massachusetts
(10-26-63 )
-
Philadelphia , Pennsylvania
(10-30-63 )
-
Chicago , Illinois
(11-2-63 ): Three Folders
[TRIP CANCELLED]
-
New York City
(11-8-63 )
In addition, one folder of vital records was missing from Box
2 in this accession, titled: “Other Places Folder #6” (for the
period July-November 1963)
Clearly, withholding these two boxes of materials from any
investigator would have kept that investigator from learning about normal
protective procedures an concerns related to everyday activities throughout the
Kennedy Presidency, and would furthermore have denied the investigator
comparative knowledge regarding how JFK was protected in numerous venues just
prior to the trip to Texas. Perhaps the reader can better understand now why
Jeremy Gunn and David Marwell were so upset with the Secret Service. The
records were destroyed in the fourth month following the establishment of the
ARRB, and furthermore had originally been tagged: “Retain permanently for
eventual transfer to the National Archives or a Presidential Library.” Their
destruction occurred long after the Secret Service was initially briefed on the
requirements of the JFK Records Act in December of 1992 by the NARA
staff, and required willful action by officials within that agency; it was
hardly an accident. The Secret Service clearly didn’t want the ARRB poking into
its past procedures and practices; the agency had been the recipient of severe
criticism in the HSCA’s 1979 Report, and apparently did not wish to repeat that
experience, or to have its sealed records released to the Archives for
placement in the JFK Records Collection, for all JFK researchers to peruse in
the future.
Chronology of Letters Exchanged Between the ARRB and the U.S.
Secret Service Over the Destruction of Protective Survey Reports
On July 25, 1995
Review Board Chairman John R. Tunheim sent a powerfully worded letter to the
Director of the Secret Service registering the Review Board’s displeasure about
its recent discovery that the two boxes in question had been destroyed over a
half a year previously. A letter from Board Chair Jack Tunheim (rather than
David Marwell or Jeremy Gunn) addressed directly to the Head of the Secret
Service (instead of to the administrative officials with whom the ARRB staff
had been dealing) was a powerful signal that the Review Board was immensely
displeased and took the matter very seriously. Some key passages in Jack
Tunheim’s letter are quoted below:
In January of this year, Dr. Jeremy
Gunnn of the Review Board staff requested of John Machado and Ann Parker of the
Secret Service that the six boxes in the accession be made available for his
review to evaluate the importance of the material for the JFK Collection in the
Archives. Although four of the boxes were made available, we were not provided
with boxes (1) and (6), the
two most important boxes. On February
7, 1995 – and several times thereafter – Mr. Machado and Ms. Parker
informed us that the Federal Records
Center “could not locate” the two
missing boxes….Although we repeatedly were told that special requests for these
records had been made at the Federal Records
Center , Ms. Ann Parker of the
Secret Service finally informed Dr. Joan Zimmeman of the Review Board staff, on
July 19, 1995 – six months after we had first requested the boxes – that the
records had in fact been destroyed in January of this year at approximately the
same time that we had requested them.
Tunheim’s letter requested full accounting of what had
happened to the two boxes; a listing of all other Secret Service records
pertaining to President Kennedy that had ever been destroyed; and instructed
the Secret Service not to destroy any records of any kind relating to President
Kennedy or his assassination without first allowing the Review Board and its
staff to review them for relevance. For added emphasis a copy of the letter was
sent to the Chief Counsel of the U.S. Secret Service, as well as to John
Machado, the apparent culprit who presumably gave the orders to destroy the
records.
The Secret Service made an immediate attempt to de-escalate
the matter by assigning an official named W. Ralph Basham, its Administrative
Director of Administration, to reply. Basham’s reply, dated July 31, 1995 , was a five-and-one-half page
single spaced attempt at obfuscation, the administrative equivalent of a Senate
filibuster, to use a legislative analogy. In addition to saying, in some many
words, ‘Hey, we didn’t do anything wrong, we were following routine destruction
procedures established years ago,’ the Secret Service attempted to wiggle out
of its predicament by simultaneously suggesting that perhaps the destruction
was really the Review Board’s fault because it was not in receipt of the ARRB’s
expanded definition of what constituted an “assassination record” until
February 1995, after the records were destroyed. Perhaps most disturbing of all
was the narrow definition that the Secret Service had used commencing in
December 1992 (following its NARA beefing on
the JFK Records Act) to define what constituted an assassination record: namely,
White House detail shift reports only for the period November 18, 1963 to
November 24, 1963. Mr. Basham also tried to downplay the significance of
the missing Chicago protective
survey reports for the cancelled November
2, 1963 trip (during which conspirators had planned to assassinate
President Kennedy) by writing:
The folder concerning the canceled trip
to Chicago would only have
contained a preliminary survey report, if any document at all, since final
reports are not conducted when a trip is cancelled. This report, if in fact it
was even in the prepared folder, would have been of limited scope. [Author’s
comments: there were 3 folders on the cancelled Chicago trip, not one, and this
attempt to portray the Chicago file as one folder was duplicitous; furthermore,
how did Basham presume to know that any reports written about the cancellation
of the Chicago trip would have been “of limited scope?” It is easy to make such claim after evidence is destroyed, because
there is no way you can be challenged.]
The ARRB’s response to this “in your face” piece of
administrative obfuscation was signed out by Executive Director David G.
Marwell on August 7, 1995 ,
and showed no mercy. Rather than simply allow the matter to “go away” or “die,”
as the Secret Service had hoped, Marwell’s leter (co-drafted by him and Gunn)
resurrected the seriousness of the matter in no uncertain terms. I quote below,
in part:
Although you concluded your letter by
stating that you “trust this explanation will clarify any misunderstandings
that may have arisen,” I regret to say that not only does your letter not allay
our concerns, it compounds them.
The President John F. Kennedy
Assassination Records Collection (JFK Act) forbids the destruction of any
documents “created or made available for use by, obtained by, or [that] otherwise came
into the possession of …. The Select Committee on Asssassinations…of the House
of Representatives.” It is our understanding that the records in Accession
87-75-0004 that the Secret Service destroyed were examined by the House Select
Committee on Assassinations and thus were “assassination records” under the JFK
Act and they apparently were destroyed in violation of law. [emphasis
in original, which is most unusual in official government correspondence – it
is the equivalent of shouting at someone during a conversation]
We see the destruction of these
assassination records as particularly ominous in light of the fact that the
Secret Service revised its destruction schedule after passage of the JFK
Act and that it targeted for destruction records that, at the time the law was
passed, were slated to be held “permanently.” [emphasis in the original]
Rather than refereeing to and applying
the standards of the JFK Act, your letter suggests that the responsibilities of
the Secret Service extend no further than complying with standard records
disposal schedules. After acknowledging that the Secret Service in fact
destroyed records in 1995 from Accession 87-75-0004 (related to the protection
of President Kennedy), you state that they were “processed in accordance with
National Archives and Records (NARA )
procedures, and in full compliance with approved records disposition
schedules.” The JFK Act, it should be clear, supercedes any law or any
disposition schedule related to “assassination records.”
This was a “right back in your face” response that told
masters of obfuscation at the Secret Service that the ARRB wasn’t going to be
rolled, and wasn’t going to go away. Marwell’s letter then upped the ante by
requesting a ton of information which any Federal agency would have had a
difficult time finding the resources to accomplish. Marwell’s letter ended with
these words:
…we specifically request that you assure
us that no Secret Service records related to Presidential protection between
1958 and 1969 or to the assassination of President Kennedy be destroyed until
the Review Board has received prior written notice and has had an
opportunity to inspect the records [emphasis in original]
Sensing that the ARRB was flexing its muscles and was about
to “go nuclear” [which was true – public hearings were being considered], Mr.
Basham replied on August 15, 1995 with a calming one-page letter and requesting
a meeting to discuss the “additional issues” which he said were raised by
Marwell’s letter. That meeting was held the very next day (August 16, 1995 ) on ARRB turf, in our offices at
600 E Street, in Northwest Washington D.C.
Following the meeting, which lasted several hours, Jeremy
Gunn (our General Counsel and Head of Research and Analysis) signed out a
letter on August 21, 1995
to Mr. Basham and Mr. Personnette (Deputy Chief Counsel) of the Secret Service.
Gunn recognized for the record that the Secret Service now had a much better
understanding of what constituted an assassination record – the ARRB set the
definition for this, not the agencies holding records, who all wished to
minimize their work – and noted for the record that the Secret Service had agreed
that no records related to Presidential protection for years 1958-1969 would be
destroyed until after the ARRB had a chance to review them to verify that no
assassination records were included. Gunn also recorded the agreement reached
on August 16, 1995 , that
Dr. Joan Zimmerman of our staff would henceforth have full access to all Secret
Service records upon demand, not just partial and limied access, as previously.
The ARRB threw a face-saving bone to the Secret Service in Gunn’s letter, as
well:
As acknowledged in the meeting, we fully understand and
accept your interest in ensuring that no documents are released that would
compromise Presidential protection. As we have mentioned before, our
professional staff is in possession of current security clearances and we will
take all appropriate measures to safeguard the records and ensure full
compliance with the law.
On the same date, August 21, 1995, Gunn signed out a letter
to the miscreant John Machado (who had ordered the two boxes destroyed), which
was much less friendly in tone and which bored in on him with a number of
questions about dubious statements previously made by Machado, and made
additional requests for information and records
The crisis had abated, and the Secret Service had avoided
embarrassing public hearings which would have exposed their perfidy. The public
was not to learn of this business until that one cryptic paragraph was
published in the ARRB Final Report in late September of 1998, three years
later. Unlike poor JFK, whom corrupt individuals in the Secret Service had
helped set up in Dallas in 1963,
the Secret Service in 1995, had ‘dodged a bullet.’
Professor Jim Fetzer summed up the situation nicely with his
comments in the documentary “The Smoking Guns,” which aired on the History
Channel in 2003:
“The Secret Service…deliberately destroyed…records that
would have revealed that the motorcade in Dallas
was a travesty, a violation of at least 15 different Secret Service policies
for Presidential protection. This behavior on their part raises the most
serious and deserving questions about their complicity in the entire
affair…which of course, is the reason why the Secret Service destroyed the
records of its own motorcades when they were asked for them by the
Assassination Records Review Board.”
4 comments:
Conveniently for Blaine, the only records apparently preserved are the ones in his hands, and that he chooses to disclose. Personally, I find Abraham Bolden's claims more credible.
Blaine wrote his book because of my 22-page letter to his best friend Clint Hill. This is a very important blog, Bill
Are Secret Service officials covering up incompetence or complicity in the assassination?
But it is something to kick around. Thank you. Blaine should post all he has and look for more.
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