Paul Kuntsler, who called for the Monday, October 8th Columbus
Day picket and protest at the National Archives (and Records Administration NARA ),
formerly owned the transcript service that handled much of the HSCA testimony.
He is a long time activist who has previously taken full page ads out in the
New York Times and Washington Post questioning their reporting on the
assassination of President Kennedy. He has also sponsored a forum on the
assassination at the Willard Hotel
and has previously held protests at the CIA ,
FBI and Secret Service.
Security at the NARA
have requested that no pickets on polls be used, but signs held by string
around the neck are okay. We have also agreed not to disturb those people in
line to get into the Archives.
Kuntsler believes, and others agree, that our purpose is not
to harass NARA employees or the
public, as most people, including many within the government agencies and
departments, support our cause, and want to see all of the remaining
assassination records released. Our purpose is to convince them that we are
right and they too should support the release of these records.
Only a few high level administrators and agency heads want
to keep these records withheld, not for reasons of national security or because
they prove conspiracy, but because they are an embarrassment to their agencies
and departments, and because they can keep them secret.
The Columbus Day protest at the NARA
was instigated by the insolence of the NARA
officials to cower and kowtow to the CIA and
agree to exclude the remaining sealed JFK assassination records from the 2013 National
Declassification Center
review. The president did not say that no government record would remain sealed
forever “except the JFK assassination recorded,” and his executive order does
not specifically exclude these records.
At the first open public hearing of the NDC two years ago,
the assistant archivist said the JFK assassination records would be included,
but that commitment was rescinded at the second public hearing, when they said
the assistant archivist had “misspoke.” That assistant archivist would retire
after over 20 years in government service. Was he fired or forced to retire
because of this issue?
Although the video of that first NDC public meeting is
posted at their web site, neither the tape or a transcript of the second or
third public meeting can be reviewed, and when I requested a video recording
and transcript of the third meeting I was told there is no transcript. While
upon request, I was supplied with a link to a Youtube videotape of the third
meeting, but that tape is posted under a private section of Youtube that other
people can’t reach by a Google search, and it freezes near the very end,
shortly before the public questions are asked, including answers to what we
consider most significant.
While a NARA
staff member has said that I would be provided with a corrected version, if I
am not, then there is nothing else to conclude except that the glitch is
intentional and there is information in that part of the tape that someone with
significant power within NARA does
not want publicly released.
This must be so because the auditorium where the public
forum was held is set up for professional audio visual recording of all
presentations, with cameras stationed behind glass and audio recording stations
throughout the room. It is inconceivable that such an accidental technical
glitch would occur at precisely the right place where the public question
aspects of the proceedings are suddenly froze and inaccessible.
For the record, three of the six post-forum public questions were related to the JFK assassination records. Jeff Morley, Jim Lesar and John Judge all asked pertinent questions or made relevant statements.
Because the open public hearing was held on a weekday in the
last week of August, shortly before the Labor Day holiday, it was clear that
the NARA officials did not want a
large public turnout.
Reported before -
“The National Declassification Center (NDC )
at the National Archives held a public forum on Aug. 29 to obtain public input
on declassification. The NDC is trying
to address a 400 million page backlog of classified records at the Archives.
During the public question period, journalist Jeff Morley (formerly with
the Washington Post) asked that NDC
reconsider its decision earlier this year not to speed up processing
of 1,171 classified CIA records related
to the JFK assassination by the 50th anniversary in 2013 (otherwise they remain
secret until at least 2017 and perhaps indefinitely beyond). The NDC /Archives
response to Morley's request was a flat no. The CIA
representative on the panel said, "My agency has nothing to say on that topic".
Another questioner, Jim Lesar, elicited the admission that it would take
approximately two months to process that quantity of complex
documents. There were six public questions asked at the forum and three
of them were from people seeking declassification of the JFK assassination
records, the most commented topic. The flat negative response to the
JFK records issue cast a pall over the proceedings. There were 100
plus people in attendance, many of them government employees.”
Reported before -
“The National Declassification Center (
The CIA representative who spoke said that much of the
declassification concerns the identity of CIA agents, whose identities they will not
reveal. If I was there I would have asked him if that included Lee Harvey
Oswald?
Jim Lesar asked the CIA man how long it would take the CIA
to review and declassify the remaining withheld CIA records if they were required
to do so, and the answer was – two months. They don’t even know how many pages there are, and they’re
not about to count them if they don’t have to. They contend they do not have to
act on them until 2017, and claim they don’t have the ability to declassify
them at this time, even though they did accelerate the declassification of all
the CIA records ordered released by 2010 in 2006, four years in advance. We are
now requesting they do the same thing for the 2017 records and declassify them
in 2013, certainly a reasonable request.
The insolence of the NARA
officials to abide by the CIA instructions and ignore the law and intense
public interest in these records has forced us to protest their actions, try to
get the attention of the media and general public and convince them it is
everyone’s best interest to declassify and release these records now.
If you can’t be there in person and participate in the
protest, but would like to support this cause, you can write your own letter, sign
our petition, get others to sign it
and contribute to the Committee for an Open Archives (COA ) Facebook paypal account that
will be used for a full page ad in a Washington DC publication posting our
petition and letters to the Archivist and Congress.
and contribute to the Committee for an Open Archives (
committeeforopenarchives.webs.com
Site for contributions to full pg ad by the Committee for
Open Archives to build support and actions for an open archives and oversight
of the JFK Act.
There motto used to be - Releasing
All We Can, Protecting What We Must
Protecting information critical to our Nation's security and demonstrating our commitment to open Government and effective declassification.
PRESS RELEASE
HISTORICAL RESEACHERS TO PICKET THE NATIONAL ARCHIVES
Historical researchers will picket the National Archives on Constitution Avenue between Seventh and Ninth Streets, N.W. near the Visitor’s Entrance on Monday, October 8, 2012 between 10:00 a.m. and 12:00 Noon and distribute an open letter to David S. Ferriero, the Archivist of the United States.
The purpose of the picket will be to protest the decision by the National Archives not to declassify documents related to the assassination of President John Kennedy, a decision made at the request of the Central Intelligence Agency.
The National Archives' decision is in violation of President Barack Obama' executive order of Tuesday, December 29, 2009 that "no information may remain classified indefinitely" as part of sweeping overhaul of the executive branch's system protecting
classified national security information.
President Obama also established a newNational
Declassification Center
at the National Archives to speed the process of declassifying historical
documents by centralizing their review. The President set a four year deadline
for processing a 400-million-page backlog of such records that originally
included the JFK assassination records to be released on the 50th
anniversary of Kennedy’s death, but later reneged on that commitment.
Historical researchers will picket the National Archives on Constitution Avenue between Seventh and Ninth Streets, N.W. near the Visitor’s Entrance on Monday, October 8, 2012 between 10:00 a.m. and 12:00 Noon and distribute an open letter to David S. Ferriero, the Archivist of the United States.
The purpose of the picket will be to protest the decision by the National Archives not to declassify documents related to the assassination of President John Kennedy, a decision made at the request of the Central Intelligence Agency.
The National Archives' decision is in violation of President Barack Obama' executive order of Tuesday, December 29, 2009 that "no information may remain classified indefinitely" as part of sweeping overhaul of the executive branch's system protecting
classified national security information.
President Obama also established a new
The October 8th picket is in protest that
decision by the Archives and the continued withholding of JFK assassination
records past the 50th anniversary of the assassination.
50 YEARS IS LONG
ENOUGH! – FREE THE JFK ASSASSINATION
RECORDS – IN OUR LIFTIME
(13) COA JFK Act Ad Hoc Lobby Group
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