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Filmmaker Stone to give evidence on latest files released on JFK assassination

The director’s Oscar-winning 1991 movie JFK suggested the killing was the work of a government conspiracy.

By contributor Associated Press Reporters
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Black and white photo of JFK and Jackie Kennedy moments before he was shot
President John F Kennedy riding in the motorcade moments before he was shot (AP Photo)

Oscar-winning director Oliver Stone, whose 1991 film JFK portrayed President John F Kennedy’s assassination as the work of a shadowy government conspiracy, is set to testify to Congress on Tuesday about thousands of newly released government documents surrounding the killing.

Experts say the files that President Donald Trump ordered to be released showed nothing undercutting the conclusion that a lone gunman killed Kennedy.

Many documents were previously released but contained newly removed redactions, including social security numbers, angering people whose personal information was disclosed.

The first hearing of the House Task Force on the Declassification of Federal Secrets comes five decades after the Warren Commission investigation concluded that Lee Harvey Oswald, a 24-year-old former Marine, acted alone in fatally shooting Kennedy as his motorcade finished a parade route in downtown Dallas on November 22 1963.

JFK Assassination Documents-Things to Know
The limousine carrying mortally wounded President John F Kennedy races toward the hospital seconds after he was shot in Dallas (Justin Newman/AP)

Anna Paulina Luna of Florida, who chairs the task force, said last month that she wants to work with writers and researchers to help solve “one of the biggest cold case files in US history”.

Experts and historians have not viewed the assassination as a cold case, viewing the evidence for Oswald as a lone gunman as strong.

Stone’s JFK was nominated for eight Oscars, including best picture, and won two. It grossed more than 200 million US dollars (£155 million) but was also dogged by questions about its factuality.

The last formal congressional investigation of Kennedy’s assassination ended in 1978, when a House committee issued a report concluding that the Soviet Union, Cuba, organised crime, the CIA and the FBI were not involved, but Kennedy “probably was assassinated as a result of a conspiracy”.

In 1976, a Senate committee said it had not uncovered enough evidence “to justify a conclusion that there was a conspiracy”.

The Warren Commission, appointed by Kennedy’s successor, President Lyndon B Johnson, concluded that Oswald fired on Kennedy’s motorcade from a sniper’s perch on the sixth floor of the Texas School Book Depository, where Oswald worked.

Police arrested Oswald within 90 minutes, and two days later, Jack Ruby, a nightclub owner, shot Oswald during a jail transfer broadcast on live television.

For Tuesday’s hearing, the task force also invited Jefferson Morley and James DiEugenio, who both have written books arguing for conspiracies behind the assassination.

Morley is editor of the JFK Facts blog and vice president of the Mary Ferrell Foundation, a repository for files related to the assassination. He has praised Luna as being open to new information surrounding the killing.

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