Chairwomen
of the House Oversight Committee
2157
Rayburn House Office Building
Washington
D.C. 20515
Phone
(202) 225-5051
Fax
(202) 225-4784
January
20, 2020
Dear
Rep. Carolyn Maloney,
As
the new chair of the House Oversight Committee, you have assumed a powerful position that requires you to represent all of the citizens of this country and
not just your constituents.
One
of the major tasks assigned to your committee is the oversight of the laws of
this land and ensure compliance. One of these laws is the JFK Act of 1992 (44 U.S.C. - 2107), unanimously passed by Congress and
signed into law by President George H. W. Bush in October 1992. This law was
passed because of the overwhelming public response to Oliver Stone’s film “JFK,”
which noted in a trailer that the government’s assassination records were
sealed and kept from the public. The law required all of the government’s
records on the assassination of President Kennedy be released to the public in
full twenty-five years after the passage of the act – in October 2017.
While
millions of documents have been released, there remains many tens of thousands
more that are being withheld or redacted because President Trump was convinced,
at the last hour, to continue withholding these records for reasons of national
security. Even the Archivist’s letter of recommendation to the President is
still sealed.
As
Federal Judge John Tunheim, former chairman of the Assassinations Records
Review Board (ARRB) told members of CAPA – Citizens Against Political
Assassinations at the National Press Club, there are no records from over fifty
years ago that could reasonably be considered a threat to our national
security.
Because
this law has been legally thwarted by the administration, because there are many
destroyed, missing and wrongfully withheld assassination records, and because
the American people require the full truth about these mattes, it is imperative
that Congress provide proper Oversight of the law, as the Constitution
requires. The last Congressional oversight hearing on the JFK Act occurred over
twenty years ago, when the life of the ARRB was extended by one year to allow
it to complete its job.
Now
the House Oversight Committee is responsible for providing the proper oversight
of this law in order to account for the destroyed, missing and wrongfully
withheld records, release the remaining sealed and redacted records in full as
the law required, and permit the Archivist of the United States to inform the
President, Congress and the American people that the law has been upheld, and the
last secret record on the assassination of President Kennedy has been released.
As a
journalist and historian who has been reporting on these matters, I would like
to be informed of when a JFK Act Oversight hearing is scheduled so I can attend.
Thank
you for your time and attention and good luck in your new position,
|William Kelly
|William Kelly
P.O. Box 250
New Lisbon, New Jersey, 08064
(billkelly3@gmail.com – 609-346-0229)
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