
8 Revelations From the Latest JFK Assassination Files
The government just released over 63,000 pages of classified JFK assassination files. Our team spent the night digging through them so you don't have to. What we found will make you question everything you thought you knew about November 22, 1963.
The folders arrived without warning. No press conference. No advance notice. Just 1,000+ PDFs suddenly appearing on the National Archives website late on March 17, 2025.
After 62 years of secrecy, excuses, and redactions, President Trump's directive has forced open the vault containing the government's most closely guarded secrets about the assassination that changed America forever.
Make no mistake: they didn't want you to see these files.
Our team at Dilutte The Power has spent hours analyzing these documents – many faded, many difficult to read, all of them lacking context or explanation. The government didn't make this easy. They never do when it comes to the truth.
But within these digital folders, hidden among thousands of pages of bureaucratic language and intelligence jargon, we've uncovered revelations that cast long shadows over the official narrative we've been fed for decades.
Here's what they've been hiding from you:
1. "He Will Kill President Kennedy in Dallas" — The Warning They Ignored
Three months before shots rang out in Dealey Plaza, someone tried to save JFK's life.
A handwritten letter from a man identified as "Sergey Zoro" claims he explicitly warned American officials on August 15, 1963 that Lee Harvey Oswald was planning to assassinate President Kennedy.
"I told to Mr. Blackshire, American Vice Consul, that Mr. Lee Harvey Oswald is an Assassin... he will kill President of the United States John F. Kennedy."
The letter continues with a chilling detail: when asked where this would happen, Zoro reportedly answered "Dallas, Texas."
Let that sink in. If this document is authentic, someone knew – and government officials were told – exactly what was coming, where it would happen, and who would pull the trigger.
And they did nothing.
2. KGB Files: "Oswald Was a Poor Shot"
The government narrative hinges on Oswald being capable of making the shots that killed Kennedy. Yet a document from September 14, 1993 tells a different story.
A KGB official named Nikonov reportedly reviewed "five thick volumes" of files on Oswald's time in the USSR. His assessment?
"He commented that Oswald was a poor shot when he tried target firing in the USSR."
This confirmation from Soviet intelligence directly contradicts the Warren Commission's portrayal of Oswald as a skilled marksman capable of the precise shooting required to kill Kennedy from the Texas School Book Depository.
How convenient this information remained hidden for decades.
3. The CIA Whistleblower Found Dead
One of the most disturbing documents concerns Gary Underhill, a man with intelligence connections who fled Washington in panic the day after the assassination.
"The day after the assassination, Gary Underhill left Washington in a hurry... he showed up at the home of friends in New Jersey. He was very agitated. A small click within the CIA was responsible for the assassination, he confided, and he was afraid for his life."
Less than six months later, Underhill was found dead from a gunshot wound to the head. The coroner ruled it suicide.
The document adds a detail that makes the suicide ruling highly suspect: "Underhill was right-handed," yet "had been shot behind the left ear and an automatic pistol was under his left side."
A right-handed man shooting himself with his left hand, behind the left ear? The files note that "occupants of the apartment building could not recall hearing a shot," suggesting a silencer was used.
This isn't just another conspiracy theory. This is in the government's own files.
4. Oswald's Mysterious Mexico Visit
Just weeks before the assassination, Oswald traveled to Mexico City and visited the Soviet Embassy. A May 1982 letter from CIA Soviet division chief David Blee describes Oswald's contact with a Soviet consular officer named Kasakov.
The letter describes Kasakov as "the most effective and dangerous of Intelligence Officers in Mexico" and a man "without morals, education, and manners."
What was Oswald, the alleged lone gunman, doing meeting with a high-level Soviet intelligence officer right before the assassination? The official narrative never adequately explained this connection.
5. FBI's Adamant Denial: "In No Way an Informant"
FBI Assistant Director Alan Belmont's testimony contains a suspiciously forceful denial that Oswald was ever an FBI informant:
"In no way could he be considered an informant. In no way."
This categorical denial, backed by a letter from J. Edgar Hoover himself, raises an obvious question: why was this such a concern that it required the FBI Director's personal attestation?
The emphatic nature of the denial suggests officials were deeply worried about this particular connection being made. Rarely do intelligence agencies offer such unambiguous statements unless they're particularly sensitive about an allegation.
6. The Castro Connection: "Do Not Attack President Johnson"
Multiple documents reveal intense focus on Cuba's reaction to Kennedy's assassination. One report states:
"The present policy of the Cuban government on orders from Castro is not to attack President Johnson in public or do anything to irritate him."
This directive came after what the document describes as Cuban leadership being "sure President Kennedy would not invade Cuba."
The timing is curious. Did Castro know something about the change in administration that made him suddenly cautious about antagonizing the new president?
7. The Explosives Request
Among the most provocative documents is a memo about a July 1963 meeting in Miami with someone identified only as "AMB Bang One." The subject? A request for explosives.
The document references "strategic targets inside Cuba" and techniques that could "bring about the downfall of the Castro regime."
This places Kennedy's assassination within the context of ongoing covert operations against Cuba – operations that would be significantly affected by a change in leadership at the White House.
The proximity of these discussions to Kennedy's assassination cannot be dismissed as mere coincidence.
8. The Martin Luther King Jr. Connection
Perhaps most unexpected is a document connecting the Kennedy assassination to Martin Luther King Jr. It describes a Panamanian seaman approached by an American who, after "ascertaining Brown was a Panamanian Seaman, asked if he knew of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr." and inquired about "employment."
The document hints at intelligence operations targeting both Kennedy and King – who would himself be assassinated less than five years later.
Was there a connection between these operations? The files don't provide a definitive answer, but the fact that both men appear in the same intelligence documents is deeply troubling.
What Does It All Mean?
After analyzing these documents, we're left with more questions than answers. But one thing is abundantly clear: the official narrative that Lee Harvey Oswald acted alone as a disturbed gunman doesn't hold up against the government's own files.
These documents point to foreknowledge of the assassination, connections to intelligence agencies both American and Soviet, and a complex web of geopolitical interests that stood to benefit from Kennedy's removal.
Why were these files kept secret for 62 years if they merely confirmed the Warren Commission's conclusions? The answer is obvious: they don't.
As historians begin the years-long process of analyzing all 63,000 pages, more revelations will undoubtedly emerge. The National Archives has indicated additional files may still be released.
At Dilutte The Power, we'll continue combing through these documents, connecting the dots that mainstream sources won't, and bringing you the truth they never wanted you to see.
What do you think these revelations mean for our understanding of the Kennedy assassination? Share your thoughts in the comments below, and subscribe to our newsletter for exclusive updates as we uncover more from these explosive files.
Sources: All information in this article comes directly from declassified documents released by the National Archives on March 17-18, 2025, as part of the JFK Assassination Records Collection.