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Strippers, surveillance, assassination plots: The wildest JFK files

More than a dozen reporters and editors for the Washington Post combed through the documents on Thursday and Friday. Here are some of the wildest things they found, some of which have been reported before and some of which are new.

Part of a file, dated April 5, 1964, detailing efforts to trace Lee Harvey Oswald’s travel from Mexico City back to the United States. The file was released for the first time on Thursday, Oct. 26, 2017.
Part of a file, dated April 5, 1964, detailing efforts to trace Lee Harvey Oswald’s travel from Mexico City back to the United States. The file was released for the first time on Thursday, Oct. 26, 2017.Read moreJON ELSWICK / AP

President Trump ordered the release of more than 2,800 records related to the John F. Kennedy assassination on Thursday, but bowed to pressure from the CIA, FBI and other agencies to delay disclosing some of the most sensitive documents for another six months. Even so, the thousands of pages that were published online by the National Archives Thursday evening describe decades of spies and surveillance, informants and assassination plots.

More than a dozen reporters and editors for the Washington Post combed through the documents on Thursday and Friday. Here are some of the wildest things they found, some of which have been reported before and some of which are new.

$100,000 to kill Fidel Castro

A 1964 FBI memo describes a meeting in which Cuban exiles tried to set a price on the heads of Fidel Castro, Raúl Castro and Ernesto "Che" Guevara. "It was felt that the $150,000.00 to assassinate FIDEL CASTRO plus $5,000 expense money was too high," the memo noted. At a subsequent meeting, they settled on more modest sums: $100,000 for Fidel, $20,000 for Raúl and $20,000 for Che.

– Michael E. Miller

Another document describes a Pentagon-proposed scheme called Operation BOUNTY that sought to overthrow Cuba's government, and established a system of financial rewards for Cubans for "killing or delivering alive known Communists." The CIA would let Cubans know of the plan by dropping leaflets in the air, but there were rules: A reward would be paid to an individual upon presentation of a leaflet, with "conclusive" proof of death and dead person's party/revolutionary membership card. Cubans who played along would get a certain dollar amount based on the title of the Communist they had killed. They would get up to $100,000 for government officials and $57,500 for "department heads." Castro, perhaps for symbolic reasons, would earn a Cuban only two cents.

– Ian Shapira

A 1960 FBI memo described a "high-priced Hollywood call girl" who was approached by Fred Otash, a well known Los Angeles private investigator, seeking information about sex parties involving then-Sen. John F. Kennedy; his brother-in-law, actor Peter Lawford; Frank Sinatra and Sammy Davis Jr. "She told the agents that she was unaware of any indiscretions," the memo said.

– Michael S. Rosenwald

An FBI file contains information on the bureau's attempt to locate a stripper named "Kitty," last name unknown. According to the file, another stripper named Candy Cane said Kitty had been an associate of Jack Ruby, the Dallas nightclub owner who killed Lee Harvey Oswald on Nov. 24, 1963. Leon Cornman, a business agent with the American Guild of Variety Artists in New Orleans, told the FBI that "the only stripper he knew by the name of Kitty who worked in New Orleans was Kitty Raville."

"He advised [that] Raville committed suicide in New Orleans in August or September 1963," the report states.

– Michael E. Ruane

Assassinating JFK 'not worth it' for Cuba

A draft report by the House Select Committee on Assassinations found it unlikely that Cuba would kill Kennedy as retaliation for the CIA's attempts on Fidel Castro's life. "The Committee does not believe Castro would have assassinated President Kennedy, because such an act, if discovered, would have afforded the United States the excuse to destroy Cuba," the draft states. "The risk would not have been worth it."

– Michael E. Ruane

A cable sent the day after the assassination revealed that the CIA had been monitoring Oswald almost two months earlier when he was in Mexico. On Sept. 28, 1963, a phone tap captured Oswald – a former Marine who'd defected to the Soviet Union at one point and married a Russian woman – dialing the Soviet embassy from the Cuban consulate in Mexico City. Despite his broken Russian, he refused to speak English.

"Please speak Russian," Oswald pleaded when the Soviet officials answered him in his own language.

The CIA's Mexico City translator "noted [the] North American spoke terrible, hardly recognizable Russian."

– Rachel Siegel

In a remarkable memo written just two days after the assassination, FBI director J. Edgar Hoover wrote that his bureau had warned Dallas police at least twice since Kennedy's killing of threats against Oswald.

"Last night we received a call in our Dallas office from a man talking in a calm voice and saying he was a member of a committee organized to kill Oswald," Hoover wrote. "We at once notified the chief of police and he assured us Oswald would be given sufficient protection. This morning we called the chief of police again warning of the possibility of some effort against Oswald and again he assured us adequate protection would be given. However, this was not done."

Oswald was fatally shot by Ruby in police headquarters on live television – fueling decades of conspiracy theories.

In an internal FBI report from May 1964, an informant told the FBI that the Ku Klux Klan said it "had documented proof that President Johnson was formerly a member of the Klan in Texas during the early days of his political career." The "documented proof" was not provided.

– Tom Jackman

An internal FBI memo dated Jan. 22, 1960, discusses an alleged plot to bribe a U.S. congressman and bring deposed Cuban dictator Fulgencio Batista to the United States. The memo, citing information provided by a Miami arms dealer, says that in exchange for securing entry into the United States for Batista, $150,000 would be split among U.S. Rep. Abraham Multer, D-N.Y., a Miami Beach attorney and two Batista "adherents" in Miami. According to the memo, the FBI took the alleged plot seriously enough to investigate, but Batista himself "turned down the proposition."

– Michael E. Miller

Several documents summarize internal discussions within Communist Party meetings after the assassination, discussing whether Oswald was innocent and whether communists would be blamed for Kennedy's death. Agents ran down rumors from prisoners and poets.

– Rachel Weiner

Some of the papers recounted the agency's well-chronicled schemes to kill Fidel Castro. One document, a summary of the CIA's plans to assassinate foreign leaders, recounted how the CIA tried to use James B. Donovan, the American lawyer and negotiator made famous by the movie "Bridge of Spies," for one plot. He would give Castro a contaminated skin-diving suit while the two negotiated for the release of the Bay of Pigs prisoners.

"It was known that Fidel Castro liked to skindive. The CIA plan was to dust the inside of the suit with a fungus producing madera foot, a disabling and chronic skin disease, and also contaminating the suit with tuberculosis bacilli in the breathing apparatus," the paper said. Donovan didn't go through it, instead presenting the Cuban leader with "an uncontaminated skindiving suit as a gesture of friendship."

Another outlandish plot described talks of prepping a "booby-trap spectacular seashell" that would be submerged in an area Castro enjoyed diving. The seashell would be loaded with explosives that would go off once lifted. "After investigation, it was determined that there was no shell in the Caribbean area large enough to hold a sufficient amount of explosive which was spectacular enough to attract the attention of Castro."

Another scheme to kill Castro involved a CIA employee fluent in Spanish based in Cuba who was recruiting a high-ranking Cuban government official in 1963. The CIA officer and the Cuban actually met in Europe on the day of Kennedy's assassination. The Cuban wanted the CIA to supply him with "some type of esoteric gadget with which he would be able to defend himself" if he got into a fight with Castro. "He had in mind some sort of pellet pen," the document read. The agency officer didn't have a pellet pen, but he did show his asset a ballpoint pen with a hypodermic needle "inside that when you pushed the lever, the needle came out and poison could be injected into someone."

But the Cuban declined the gadget because it would have required him to get too close to Castro. Instead, the agent asked the CIA operative for weapons. The agency complied, sending down high-powered rifles with scopes to Cuba. The asset was never used. The case officer broke off contact in 1964.

– Ian Shapira

An April 1964 memo from J. Edgar Hoover ordered the FBI to check out a report that Jack Ruby and Dallas Police officer J.D. Tippitt – fatally shot by Oswald shortly after Oswald killed Kennedy – had met at Ruby's strip club, the Carousel Club, sometime prior to the assassination. Hoover seemed skeptical.

– Tom Jackman

Many of the files reveal the FBI's often extraordinary efforts to identify suspected communists in the United States. Dozens of documents amount to brief records on individuals whose names were drawn from the mailing list for a publication called "The Worker." Other files include reports from associates of Hollywood figures, including screenwriter John Howard Lawson, suspected of being members of the Communist Party in California.

Some of the files predate the Kennedy assassination by nearly two decades. A collection of FBI records from 1945 record the bureau's struggles to install and maintain a wiretap on Lawson's Coldwater Canyon home. One file describes the bureau's plan to install a microphone at the house while Lawson was expected to be in San Francisco for a United Nations conference. But the bureau's plans were thwarted when agents discovered "a person residing at the Lawson home" in his absence.

Lawson was one of the "Hollywood Ten": the first group of U.S. film professionals to be blacklisted.

– Greg Miller

The documents show that for years, the FBI used informants to monitor the Communist Party in Dallas – a group that consisted of five or six people – so small they could sometimes hold a meeting inside a car.

– Devlin Barrett

One memo described tensions between CIA and FBI officials that still exist today. It quotes FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover as saying: "More and more we are telling CIA about our domestic operations and always to our detriment. I want this stopped."

– Michael S. Rosenwald

Many of the documents center on the activities of Cuban anti-Castro groups – including Orlando Bosch's Insurrectional Movement of Revolutionary Recovery (MIRR) – as the FBI tried to dissuade or scuttle their plans for armed invasions of the island. One FBI document from June 1959 predicts an uprising against Castro that never came: "Conditions are getting so bad in Cuba that it can well be that a counterrevolution will occur from within Cuba, rather than waiting for any invasion force from outside. . .. Powerful interests, such as bankers, sugar institute, et cetera, are extremely dissatisfied."

Similarly, another 1959 FBI report relays intelligence on a Cuban exiles jockeying to replace Castro if he were to be overthrown, an outcome seen as all but assured. The same document cites the prediction by an informant that Castro "cannot last more than two months."

– Michael E. Miller and Greg Miller

The records also reveal a deposition given before the presidential Commission on CIA Activities in 1975 by Richard Helms, who had served as the agency's director. After a discussion of Vietnam, David Belin, an attorney for the commission, turned to whether the CIA was involved in Kennedy's killing.

"Well, now, the final area of my investigation relates to charges that the CIA was in some way conspiratorially involved with the assassination of President Kennedy. During the time of the Warren Commission, you were Deputy Director of Plans, is that correct?" Belin asked.

After Helms replied that he was, Belin then asked: "Is there any information involved with the assassination of President Kennedy which in any way shows that Lee Harvey Oswald was in some way a CIA agent or agent. . ."

Then, suddenly, the document cuts off.

– Ian Shapira