AFTERTHOUGHTS BEYOND THOUGHTS 💭
AFTERTHOUGHTS BEYOND THOUGHTS 💭
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An intelligence agent who performed special assignments for the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) claimed that the agency was "responsible" for the death of President John F. Kennedy.
A memo released by President Donald Trump—most of which had been previously released by former President Joe Biden in 2021—states that the day after Kennedy's death, Gary Underhill traveled from Washington, D.C., to New Jersey to confide in his friends that he believed a "small clique within the CIA was responsible for the assassination."
Underhill told his friends he feared for his life. Six months later, he was found dead in what was ruled a suicide. None of Underhill's accusations have been proven, and he has become the subject of many conspiracies over the years.
In 1964, the Warren Commission determined that Lee Harvey Oswald assassinated Kennedy on November 22, 1963, and that Oswald acted alone.
Gary Underhill, full name John Garrett Underhill, worked in military intelligence during World War II before becoming one of the Central Intelligence Agency's "un-people," meaning he performed, per the released memo, "special assignments" for the agency.
He also worked as a photojournalist for Life magazine between 1938 and 1942.
Underhill was found dead on May 8, 1964, with a bullet to the left side of his head. He was found by a writing collaborator at the New Republic, Asher Brynes, who said he found it suspicious, as Underhill was right-handed.
Underhill's accusations have been explored in books and papers for years. Although some JFK researchers hoped this new trove of documents would lead them closer to understanding whether the late president was killed by someone other than Lee Harvey Oswald, Underhill's accusations, which are already well known, are in the spotlight again.
This memo differs from Biden's release in that it includes more information on Samuel George Cummings, who operated the weapons company Interarms, which Underhill believed to be associated with the murder.
This memo states that the CIA owned Interarms before Cummings officially bought it in 1958.
The memo states that Underhill was "on intimate terms with a number of high-ranking CIA officials" and that he attributed Kennedy's death to a "CIA clique which was carrying on a lucrative racket in gun-running, narcotics, and other contraband and manipulating political intrigue to serve its own ends."
Underhill's claim outlined in the memo was that Kennedy uncovered this plot and was murdered before he could "blow the whistle on it."
According to the friends that Underhill met with a day after Kennedy was shot, he was "sober but badly shook." They said they'd always understood Underhill to be a "perfectly rational and objective person" but that they did not take his account seriously at first because they "couldn't believe that the CIA could contain a corrupt element every bit as ruthless – and more efficient – as the mafia."
One link made between Underhill and the CIA was that he had been previously friends with Cummings. The memo states that Cummings sold arms to the CIA and to "Klein's Sporting Goods of Chicago, from whence the mail order Carcano [rifle] allegedly was purchased by Oswald."
The documents differ between the 2021 and the 2025 versions in that this new memo goes further into detail about Cummings' life and business.
Cummings is already well known for owning the International Armament Corporation "Interarms" and Interamco, arms dealerships that supplied weapons to the CIA.
However, this memo points out something new: Interarms and Interarmco were initially owned by the CIA, which hired Cummings as a chief agent before he took over the companies.
This memo states, "On 17 August 1954 Cummings became the principal agent of the CIA-owned companies known as International Armament Corporation and Interarmco Lt...in 1958 Cummings assumed sole ownership of International Armament Corp, of and Interarmco."
This appears to be new information as Cummings's obituary states that he left the CIA in 1953 to found Interarms. This new memo, which has information compiled from Cummings' 201 file and the Office of Security, alleges that is not the case.
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