Revealed: U.S. Soldiers Overheard JFK Assassination Plot, Committed to Mental Institutions
President Trump released more than 35,000 documents in November of 2017 and 18,000 documents in April of 2018 related to the assassination of John F. Kennedy. Despite the fact that these documents were withheld from the public for more than fifty years and contain information that sheds new light on the infamous event, the mainstream media barely covered either release.
One paragraph from a document that surfaced reads:
…the “Surgeon General’s Report” on the assassination stated that the first bullet entered the President’s throat below the adams apple, clearly showing that two persons were involved with the first shot being fired from the bridge across the park way in front of the car.This is hardly the narrative sold to the general public. More on that HERE.
To further substantiate this, POTITO said there was a bullet hole in the wind shield of the President’s car…
Another bombshell that has come to light is the fact that two U.S. Army cryptographic code operators who overheard the JFK assassination plan were thrown into mental institutions after attempting to report it.
President Trump’s forced the release of 53,000 CIA documents regarding the Kennedy assassination that were withheld from the public for more than a half-century continues to reveal damning revelations. One comes from Dr. Jerry Kroth, an Associate Professor Emeritus from Santa Clara University in California, who combed through the documents and found that two U.S. soldiers in separate locations uncovered cryptographic messages indicating that President Kennedy was going to be assassinated, prior to his murder in Dallas. The two soldiers were Private First Class Eugene V. Dinkin and Sergeant David Christensen.
Their fate? Both men were thrown into mental institutions after attempting to report what they heard!
(1) PRIVATE FIRST CLASS EUGENE V. DINKINSource: Fellowship of the Minds
Private First Class Eugene Dinkin was a U.S. Army cryptographic code operator stationed in Metz, France. In early November 1963, three weeks before the JFK assassination, Dinkin intercepted—or decoded— two messages about a plot to assassinate the President of the United States. The messages contained three names: French/Corsican assassin Jean Souetre, Guy Banister, and William Harvey.
Note: In 2007, in his deathbed confession that then-VP Lyndon B. Johnson and the CIA had conspired to assassinate President Kennedy, former CIA officer E. Howard Hunt mentioned two of the three names Dinkin had intercepted.
PFC Dinkin had a friend mail a letter to Robert Kennedy, warning him that an assassination attempt on his brother would occur in Texas on about November 28, and that a communist or a “negro” would be blamed for the murder.
Doubting that the letter would ever reach Robert Kennedy, Dinkin went AWOL from his unit on November 4, 1963. He entered Switzerland using forged travel orders and a false Army identification card. On November 6, he appeared in the Press Room of the United Nations in Geneva and told reporters he was being persecuted, that “they” were plotting against President Kennedy, and that “something” would happen in Dallas.
On November 13, Dinkin was arrested by the U.S. military, placed in a psychiatric hospital, and later transferred to Walter Reed Army Hospital in Washington, DC, where he underwent psychological tests before eventually being released six months later.
Dinkin’s allegation reached the White House on November 29, and went to the Warren Commission in April of 1964. Neither the FBI nor the Warren Commission ever investigated the Dinkin case.
According to documents on the JFK assassination released by the Trump administration, two U.S. soldiers uncovered cryptographic messages indicating that President Kennedy was going to be assassinated prior to the event. Private First Class Eugene V. Dinkin and Sergeant David Christensen were both thrown in mental institutions when they tried to report their discovery.
(2) SERGEANT DAVID CHRISTENSEN
David Christensen was a U.S. Air Force sergeant stationed at an RAF base in Kirknewton, Scotland. The base had a relationship with the CIA and was used by the CIA as a top-secret listening station.
Just before November 1963, Sgt. Christensen intercepted a communication that an assassination attempt would be made on President Kennedy. According to Jerry Kroth, “Christensen heard something he shouldn’t have heard, and he heard it in a top-secret CIA listening post. As you can probably guess, Sgt. Christensen, like Eugene Dinkin, was summarily ‘committed to a mental institution.’”
Kroth writes:One should raise an important question here as with all of these released documents: why were they withheld for half a century? Clearly, if two psychotic persons ranted off about the President being killed—and both properly confined to mental institutions as deranged —such stories would merely constitute tabloid pulp and not rise above the level of the National Enquirer. The fact that these stories never graced our supermarkets, but were withheld from the public and from scholars for five decades is certainly worth more than a raised eyebrow.
Two code operators, in secret American military installations, quite independently of each other—and both obviously with clearances—discovered chatter, decidedly secret chatter, about the coming assassination of the President of the United States. If taken seriously, it meant a deep conspiracy was afoot involving high level government and military plotters, not little Lee Harvey who was sorting textbooks in the Texas School Book Depository for $1.25 an hour.
In order to preserve the Warren Commission myth that a single, lone assassin shot the President required—absolutely and irrevocably—that such news be hidden, covered up, and sequestered from any public awareness—and indeed it was. Frankly, it is a miracle these files survived at all considering their significance.