Assassination Records Review Board
The Players
Who called whom? Joan Zimmerman called James M. Mastrovito
of Witnesses/Consultants
Description of the Call
Date: 04/01/97
Subject: USSS Records
Summary of the Call:
James Mastrovito called Dave Montague in response to
information about ARRB that dave had sent at the beginning of March 1997. I
wanted to speak to James Mastrovito because he was in charge of the JFK
assassination file at the Secret Service in 1975. Mastrovito said he started
working at the Secret Service in 1959 and retired in 1979. From 1960 to 1962,
Mastrovito was on the White House Detail. In the summer of 1962, Mastrovito was
in the USSS field office in Charleston ,
West Virginia . After the
assassination, he was called to headquarters. He became a Deputy in the
Intelligence Division (formerly Protective Research Section PRS ) for 10 years before becoming the director of
the Intelligence Division a few years before he retired. He worked with Walter
Young, who replaced Robert Bouck. According to Mastrovito, Bouck moved out of PRS in the reorganization of the Intelligence
Division after 1963.
When Mastrovito took charge of the JFK Assassination file,
it consisted of 5 or 6 file cabinets of material. After Mastrovito finished
“culling” irrelevant material, the collection was down to one five-draw file
cabinet. Mastrovito guessed that his purging of extraneous material took place
around 1970. He said that the extraneous material consisted of records of
2000-3000 “mental cases” who called the Secret Service after the Kennedy assassination
to claim responsibility for the shooting. Mastrovito offered that Robert Blakey
questioned him about this destruction of documents and threatened legal action.
Mastrovito pointed out that Chief Rowley’s August 1965 memo directed him to
remove irrelevant material. Blakey had obtained index cards from the Secret
Service for what were then called “White House cases” and/or CO2 cases. These
cares had been sent to the Warren Commission in a card index file. From these
cares, Warren Commission members had requested specific Secret Service reports.
Blakey had also sought specific files based on his examination of these index
cards. Apparently, Mastrovito had destroyed some files that Blakey had wanted
to see. Mastrovito decided which files to keep and which files to destroy.
Mastrovito said no one had access to the assassination file
except people in the Secret Service. Some reports were copied for the FBI and
the Warren Commission. Mastrovito said protective surveys were not in the
assassination file but were kept in the operations division.
Mastrovito said that a “CO2” number referred to Intelligence
Division or PRS numbering. He
speculated that a “CO-S” would go directly to the Chief’s office. CO2 cases did
not go to the Chief’s office unless there was a particular or special reason
for the Chief’s attention.
Mastrovito mentioned that Thomas Kelley was an Assistant
Director of the Secret Service when Mastrovito knew him. Kelley interviewed
Oswald in the DPD jail. Mastrovito used to kid Kelly because he never wrote a
final report on the case.
I asked Mastrovito if he had viewed or obtained any
artifacts while he was in charge of the assassination file. Mastrovito replied
that he had received a piece of President Kennedy’s brain. Mastrovito offered
that this item was contained in a vial with a label on it identifying its
contents. The vial was the size of a prescription bottle. Mostrovito did not
remember if it was glass or plastic. The vial was from the Air Force (sic) Institute of Pathology . (Armed Forces Institute of
Pathology) Mastrovito said this vial from the AFIP lab came into his possession
“about 3 or 4 years later.” i.e. after the assassination.
(Then Mastrovito said it was about “1969 or 1970”) The label
said the vial had been sent from the autopsy at Bethesda ; there was no other explanation with
it. Mastrovito said he could not see what was special about the portion in the
vial. I asked Mastrovito who gave him the vial, and he replied that his
supervisor, Walter Young (first Chief of the Intelligence Division), gave it to
him when he (Young) resigned from the Secret Service. Young had apparently
received it from someone at AFIP. Mastrovito offered that Walter Young died
last year. Mastrovito said he destroyed the vial and its contents in a machine
that destroys food.
Mastrovito offered more information about Secret Service records as follows: He said that after the assassination, the Secret Service change its policy regarding its records in presidential libraries. Before November 1963, the Service had sent its records to the federal records centers and to presidential libraries. That is, Secret Service criminal files were available to the public, for example, in the FDR library and the Truman library. After the assassination, the Secret Service recalled its criminal files from the Truman library saying that the agency wished to review them in light of the assassination. Instead of returning these files to the Truman library as promised, as Mastrovito put it, “the Secret Service kept the files, and we destroyed them.” In those days, according to Mastrovito, the feeling at the Secret Service was that people’s criminal files should not be available to the public. The Secret Service also recalled selected files from the FDR library.
Mastrovito was quite agreeable to the suggestion of future
contacts from me, and he provided his travel itinerary and telephone numbers
for the next several months.
END HORNE
THE BLAINE DOCUMENTS
Lamar
Waldron and Thom Hartmann in “Legacy of Secrecy” (p. 766,
Counterpoint Press, 2008) wrote, “In November 1994, the authors informed the
Review Board very generally about JFK’s 1963 plans for a coup in Cuba,…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 for 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)
DOUG
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:
Box 1 Protection
of the President (John F. Kennedy)
- 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)
Box 6 Protective
Survey Reports for the following trips:
- 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 and 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
theFederal 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 NARAbeefing 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 missingChicago 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 untilthe 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 WashingtonD.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.’
THE BLAINE DOCUMENTS
The
Gerald Blaine documents consist of 28 pages – mostly duty assignments and
travel vouchers, but there is a brief statement, a denial of having consumed
any alcoholic beverages at the Press Club or the Cellar in Ft. Worth,
and two survey reports – one for Tampa and the one for a post assassination
State Department reception between foreign dignitaries and LBJ.
All of
these documents will be posted at JFKCountercoup.blogspot.com and given to Rex
Bradford for posting at Mary Ferrell.
There are also three pages of handwritten notes, two pages written over an assignment schedule dated from Nov. 8 to November 30 that reads in full:
There are also three pages of handwritten notes, two pages written over an assignment schedule dated from Nov. 8 to November 30 that reads in full:
Blaime’s
Statement regarding drinking at the Ft. Worth Press Club and Cellar
reads:
December
6, 1963
I Gerald
S. Blaine do make the following statement:
In Fort Worth, Texas, I worked the 12:00PM – 8:00AM shift
at the Hotel Texas onNovember 22, 1963.
During my stay in Fort Worth, Texas, I consumed no Alcoholic
beverages at either the Press Club or at the Cellar Inn.
Before my tour of duty started I had stopped by the Press Club for about 10
minues. This was prior to the 11:00PM on the 21st of November.
At 5:00AM to 5:10AM I was at the Cellar Inn for a coffee break, but had no
beverage at all, coffee or otherwise.
Respectfully
Submitted,
(UNSIGNED)
These 28
pages of documents the NARA recently released as those recovered from
Blaine and previously thought destroyed, consists of assignments, travel
vouchers, a Ft. Worth drinking statement and two survey reports, one for Tampa
and one for LBJ’s visit to the State Department.
These 28
pages just don’t jive with what Blaine says in his book – “he had kept all of
his personal reports for all these years…..the boxes were important, he found
the box from 1963 and…it was all there, pages and pages of information that
refuted all the claims this guy was making” (that they had been destroyed).
In “The
Kennedy Detail” (p.357) Blaine, via McCubbin wrote: “It had been a
long time, butBlaine was compelled to pull out his files to make sure his
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.”
Where
are the “boxes” of his personal reports he had kept for all these years?
Did
the NARA only ask him for the documents related
to Tampa and Dallas?
Did Blaine turn
over all of his records to the Secret Service who in turn culled from them the
28 pages that were turned over to the NARA, or did
the NARA receive more records and only released these 28 pages?
Or
was Blaine exaggerating and these 28 pages are really the only
official records he kept in the boxes for so many years?
Posted
on January 7, 2014 by Vince Palamara
Secret
Service destroys JFK assassination related documents: what was destroyed and
what Gerald Blaine “donated”
Gerald
Blaine turned over to the National Archives documents ALREADY MADE AVAILABLE-
the Final Survey Report for the Tampa, FL trip of 11/18/63. Blaine mistakenly
thought THESE were the documents “conspiracy theorists” thought were
destroyed…as usual, he is wrong.
THESE
were the ONLY records released by the Secret Service, all in the late 1990′s. I
have them all, as
any citizen with the money can order copies via the
collection at the National Archives:
The
November 1963 Secret Service shift reports;
RIF
#154-10002-10417:
Final
Survey Report Philadelphia, PA trip 10/30/63;
RIF#154-10002-10418
:
Final
Survey Report Elkton, MD trip 11/14/63;
RIF#154-10002-10419
:
Final
Survey Report SECOND New York City trip 11/14-11/15/63;
RIF#154-10002-10420:
Final
Survey Report Palm Beach, FL trip 11/18/63;
RIF#154-10002-10421:
Final
Survey Report Cape Canaveral, FL 11/18/63;
RIF#154-10002-10423:
Final
Survey Report Tampa, FL 11/18/63;
RIF#154-10002-10422:
Final
Survey Report Miami, FL 11/18/63;
RIF#154-10002-10424:
Final
Survey report San Antonio, TX, 11/21/63;
Here is
what was destroyed, Gerald:
A
Summary of the Records Destroyed by the Secret Service in January of 1995.
[special
thanks to Bill Kelly and the ARRB's Doug Horne]
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:
Box 1
Protection of the President (John F. Kennedy)
-
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)
Box 6
Protective Survey Reports for the following trips:
-
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)
Gives new meaning to the words: "Nothing to see here; move along." I think I'll use that in my book. Outstanding article! Well composed; I thank you Sir. Bill I see you "followed me" on Google+. On April 2nd, Google+ is shutting down as I understand it. My weekly blog is posted at Blogger, Medium, Spreely, ok.ru, facebook (censored sometimes. His Peace to you, Kyle
ReplyDelete