This Act may be cited

   Нельзя  писать впечатления  от  грёз  советс -
кого  романиста,  который  в  восьмидесятых  под
видом  фантоизображений,  позволил  себе,  на
радость  умным  советским  женщинам,  намек -
нул  о  подготовке,  исполнении  и  уничтожению  утки,
в  действительности,  трагедии  американцев  и  наших
дам.

   К своему  великому  удовольствию,  цивильные
русские  и  развитые  интеллектуально  женщины
хотя  бы  в  книге  постигли  негодяя - утку,  негодяев -
заговорщиков  и  негодяев - исполнителей  1963  года
по  изъятию  из  жизни  бедного  президента  для  взятия  его
жизненной  энергии  силами  подонков.

   Если  внимательно прочесть  атмосферу  до-
кументальной  плёнки,  увидеть  можно  всё.  На  лице,
остром  и  отточенном,  как  аскетическими  раз -
мышлениями,  так  и физическими  нагрузками,
можно  увидеть,  что  утка  не  только  знает  всё
о  жизни  и  гибели,  но  и  ведает,
что  мы  сейчас  о  нём пишем,  и  благодарен.

   Поскольку простому  обывателю  покажется,  что
для  утки  полной  неожиданностью являются  конт -
рольные  выстрелы  в  живот  и  грудь, -  но  он  и
об  этом  знает.

   Обратите  внимание,  голову  он  приберёг,
направляя  на  себя  руку  толстовато - низкого
парня.  Значит,  успел  в  экстремуме  экстремума
сообщить  всё,  что  нужно,  ментально,  ко -
нечно,  на  приём.  Мы,  девятилетние  дети
СССР  и Махачкалы  параллели  не  смогли
бы  почувствовать  то,  о  чём  сейчас  пишем,
иначе.

   Обратите  внимание,  насколько  чужда 
его  жена  по  сравнению  с ушедшей  десятком
лет  раньше  любимой, - она  ничто  не  прочла 
после  первого  выстрела,  а  после  второго  и  третьего
просто  ужаснулась,  и  вместо того,  чтобы  зак -
рыть  руками  голову  любимого  мужа,  чтобы
защитить  его  от  чего - то,  уже  убитого,
она  подумала,  что  в  таком  положении,  в  каком
она  есть,  она  понадобится  своему  народу.
Она  убита,  не  убитая.  Как  в  27 - ой  главе традиции,
связавшей  реалы  Абсолютом  яко -бы.  Давид !???
Возможно,  она  приняла  доказательства  цены
жизненной  энергии  своего  мужа,  что  ничего
не значит,  только  и  всего.

   Пусть  Вам  не  покажется  странным   тот 
факт,  что сочувствующий,принимающий  индивидуальное
участие,уже  в  63-ем  имеет  мобильный  телефон,
который  даже  не  дрожит  в  его  руке.
Именно  он,  оправданно  иронично  наблюдает
тогда,  живёт  и  молодеет.  Всемирные  ка -
тастрофы  на  его  совести,  которая  у  него  в
зачаточном  состоянии.  Всему  причина  его
похоть.  Похоть  Невидимого  Главы  Мира
к  естественности,  как  Он  полагает,  только
Ему  принадлежащей.

   Об  одном  Он  только  не  догадывается,  что
дерзко  смеясь,  Он  всё  равно  не  поймёт -
нравы  России.

Section 1:
Short Title
This Act may be cited as the “President John
F. Kennedy Assassination Records Collection
Act of 1992”.
Section 2:
Findings, Declarations, and Purposes
(a) Findings and Declarations- The Congress
finds and declares that—
(1) all Government records related to the
assassination of President John F. Kennedy
should be preserved for historical and governmental
purposes;
(2) all Government records concerning the
assassination of President John F. Kennedy
should carry a presumption of immediate
disclosure, and all records should be eventually
disclosed to enable the public to become
fully informed about the history surrounding
the assassination;
(3) legislation is necessary to create an
enforceable, independent, and accountable
p rocess for the public disclosure of such
records;
(4) legislation is necessary because congressional
records related to the assassination
of President John F. Kennedy would not
otherwise be subject to public disclosure
until at least the year 2029;
(5) legislation is necessary because the
Freedom of Information Act, as implemented
by the executive branch, has prevented the
timely public disclosure of records relating to
the assassination of President John F.
Kennedy;
(6) legislation is necessary because Executive
Order No. 12356, entitled “National
Security Information” has eliminated the
declassification and downgrading schedules
relating to classified information across government
and has prevented the timely public
disclosure of records relating to the assassination
of President John F. Kennedy; and
(7) most of the records related to the assassination
of President John F. Kennedy are
almost 30 years old, and only in the rarest
cases is there any legitimate need for continued
protection of such records.
(b) Purposes- The purposes of this Act are—
(1) to provide for the creation of the President
John F. Kennedy Assassination Records
Collection at the National A rchives and
Records Administration; and
(2) to require the expeditious public transmission
to the Archivist and public disclosure
of such records.
Section 3:
Definitions
In this Act:
(1) “Archivist” means the Archivist of the
United States.
(2) “Assassination record” means a record
that is related to the assassination of President
John F. Kennedy, that was created or
made available for use by, obtained by, or
otherwise came into the possession of—
(A) the Commission to Investigate the
Assassination of President John F. Kennedy
(the “Warren Commission”);
(B) the Commission on Central Intelligence
Agency Activities Within the United
States (the “Rockefeller Commission”);
(C) the Senate Select Committee to
Study Governmental Operations with
Respect to Intelligence Activities (the
“Church Committee”);
(D) the Select Committee on Intelligence
(the “Pike Committee”) of the House of Representatives;
(E) the Select Committee on Assassinations
(the “House Assassinations Committee”)
of the House of Representatives;
(F) the Library of Congress;
(G) the National Archives and Records
Administration;
183
APPENDIX C
TH E PR E S I D E N T JO H N F. KE N N E D Y AS S A S S I N AT I O N
RE C O R D S CO L L E C T I O N AC T O F 1992 (JFK AC T)
(H) any Presidential library;
(I) any Executive agency;
(J) any independent agency;
(K) any other office of the Federal Government;
and
(L) any State or local law enforcement
office that provided support or assistance or
performed work in connection with a Federal
inquiry into the assassination of President
John F. Kennedy, but does not include the
autopsy records donated by the Kennedy
family to the National Archives pursuant to a
deed of gift regulating access to those
records, or copies and reproductions made
from such records.
(3) “Collection” means the President John
F. Kennedy Assassination Records Collection
established under section 4.
(4) “Executive agency” means an Executive
agency as defined in subsection 552(f)
of title 5, United States Code, and includes
any Executive department, military department,
Government corporation, Government
controlled corporation, or other establishment
in the executive branch of the
Government, including the Executive Off i c e
of the President, or any independent re g ulatory
agency.
(5) “Government office” means any office
of the Federal Government that has possession
or control of assassination re c o rd s ,
including—
(A) the House Committee on Administration
with regard to the Select Committee
on Assassinations of the records of the House
of Representatives;
(B) the Select Committee on Intelligence
of the Senate with regard to records of the
Senate Select Committee to Study Governmental
Operations with Respect to Intelligence
Activities and other assassination
records;
(C) the Library of Congress;
(D) the National Archives as custodian
of assassination records that it has obtained
or possesses, including the Commission to
Investigate the Assassination of Pre s i d e n t
John F. Kennedy and the Commission on
Central Intelligence Agency Activities in the
United States; and
(E) any other executive branch office or
agency, and any independent agency.
(6) “Identification aid” means the written
description pre p a red for each re c o rd as
required in section 4.
(7) “National A rchives” means the
National Archives and Records Administration
and all components thereof, including
Presidential archival depositories established
under section 2112 of title 44, United States
Code.
(8) “Official investigation” means the
reviews of the assassination of President John F.
Kennedy conducted by any Presidential commission,
any authorized congressional committee,
and any Government agency either indep
e n d e n t l y, at the request of any Pre s i d e n t i a l
commission or congressional committee, or at
the request of any Government off i c i a l .
(9) “Originating body” means the Executive
agency, government commission, congressional
committee, or other governmental
entity that created a re c o rd or particular
information within a record.
(10) “Public interest” means the compelling
interest in the prompt public disclosure
of assassination records for historical
and governmental purposes and for the purpose
of fully informing the American people
about the history surrounding the assassination
of President John F. Kennedy.
(11) “Record” includes a book, paper, map,
photograph, sound or video re c o rd i n g ,
machine readable material, computerized,
digitized, or electronic information, regardless
of the medium on which it is stored, or
other documentary material, regardless of its
physical form or characteristics.
(12) “Review Board” means the Assassination
Records Review Board established by
section 7.
(13) “Third agency” means a Government
agency that originated an assassination
record that is in the possession of another
agency.
Section 4:
President John F. Kennedy Assassination
Records Collection at the National
Archives and Records Administration
(a) In General-
(1) Not later than 60 days after the date
of enactment of this Act, the National
A rchives and Records Administration shall
commence establishment of a collection of
re c o rds to be known as the President John
F. Kennedy Assassination Records Collection.
In so doing, the A rchivist shall ensure
the physical integrity and original pro v enance
of all re c o rds. The Collection shall
consist of re c o rd copies of all Government
184
re c o rds relating to the assassination of
P resident John F. Kennedy, which shall be
transmitted to the National A rchives in
a c c o rdance with section 2107 of title 44,
United States Code. The A rchivist shall
p re p a re and publish a subject guidebook
and index to the collection.
(2) The Collection shall include—
(A) all assassination records—
(i) that have been transmitted to the
National Archives or disclosed to the public
in an unredacted form prior to the date of
enactment of this Act;
(ii) that are required to be transmitted
to the National Archives; or
(iii) the disclosure of which is postponed
under this Act;
(B) a central directory comprised of
identification aids created for each record
transmitted to the Archivist under section 5;
and
(C) all Review Board records as required
by this Act.
(b) D i s c l o s u re of Records- All assassination
re c o rds transmitted to the National
A rchives for disclosure to the public shall
be included in the Collection and shall be
available to the public for inspection and
copying at the National A rchives within 30
days after their transmission to the
National A rc h i v e s .
(c) Fees for Copying- The Archivist shall—
(1) charge fees for copying assassination
records; and
(2) grant waivers of such fees pursuant to
the standards established by section 552(a)(4)
of title 5, United States Code.
(d) Additional Requirements-
(1) The Collection shall be preserved, protected,
archived, and made available to the
public at the National Archives using appropriations
authorized, specified, and
restricted for use under the terms of this Act.
(2) The National Archives, in consultation
with the Information Security Oversight
Office, shall ensure the security of the postponed
assassination records in the Collection.
(e) Oversight- The Committee on Government
Operations of the House of Representatives
and the Committee on Governmental
Affairs of the Senate shall have continuing
oversight jurisdiction with respect to the Collection.
Section 5:
Review, Identification, Transmission to the
National Archives, and Public Disclosure
of Assassination Records by Government
Offices
(a) In General-
(1) As soon as practicable after the date of
enactment of this Act, each Government off i c e
shall identify and organize its re c o rds re l a t i n g
to the assassination of President John F.
Kennedy and pre p a re them for transmission
to the A rchivist for inclusion in the Collection.
(2) No assassination re c o rd shall be
destroyed, altered, or mutilated in any way.
(3) No assassination record made available
or disclosed to the public prior to the date of
enactment of this Act may be withheld,
redacted, postponed for public disclosure, or
reclassified.
(4) No assassination record created by a
person or entity outside government (excluding
names or identities consistent with the
requirements of section 6) shall be withheld,
redacted, postponed for public disclosure, or
reclassified.
(b) Custody of Assassination Records Pending
Review- During the review by Government
offices and pending review activity by the
Review Board, each Government office shall
retain custody of its assassination records for
purposes of preservation, security, and efficiency,
unless—
(1) the Review Board requires the physical
transfer of records for purposes of conducting
an independent and impartial review;
(2) transfer is necessary for an administrative
hearing or other Review Board function; or
(3) it is a third agency record described in
subsection (c)(2)(C).
(c) Review-
(1) Not later than 300 days after the date of
enactment of this Act, each Government
o ffice shall re v i e w, identify and org a n i z e
each assassination record in its custody or
possession for disclosure to the public,
review by the Review Board, and transmission
to the Archivist.
(2) In carrying out paragraph (1), a Government
office shall—
(A) determine which of its records are
assassination records;
(B) determine which of its assassination
records have been officially disclosed or publicly
available in a complete and unredacted
form;
185
(C)
(i) determine which of its assassination
records, or particular information contained
in such a record, was created by a
t h i rd agency or by another Government
office; and
(ii) transmit to a third agency or other
Government office those records, or particular
information contained in those records, or
complete and accurate copies thereof;
(D)
(i) determine whether its assassination
re c o rds or particular information in
assassination records are covered by the standards
for postponement of public disclosure
under this Act; and
(ii) specify on the identification aid
re q u i red by subsection (d) the applicable postponement
provision contained in section 6;
(E) organize and make available to the
Review Board all assassination records identified
under subparagraph (D) the public disclosure
of which in whole or in part may be
postponed under this Act;
(F) organize and make available to the
Review Board any record concerning which
the office has any uncertainty as to whether
the record is an assassination record governed
by this Act;
(G) give priority to—
(i) the identification, re v i e w, and
transmission of all assassination records publicly
available or disclosed as of the date of
enactment of this Act in a redacted or edited
form; and
(ii) the identification, re v i e w, and
transmission, under the standards for postponement
set forth in this Act, of assassination
records that on the date of enactment of
this Act are the subject of litigation under section
552 of title 5, United States Code; and
(H) make available to the Review Board
any additional information and records that
the Review Board has reason to believe it
requires for conducting a review under this
Act.
(3) The Director of each archival depository
established under section 2112 of title 44,
United States Code, shall have as a priority
the expedited review for public disclosure of
assassination records in the possession and
custody of the depository, and shall make
such records available to the Review Board as
required by this Act.
(d) Identification Aids-
(1)
(A) Not later than 45 days after the date
of enactment of this Act, the Archivist, in
consultation with the appropriate Government
offices, shall prepare and make available
to all Government offices a standard
form of identification or finding aid for use
with each assassination re c o rd subject to
review under this Act.
(B) The Archivist shall ensure that the
identification aid program is established in
such a manner as to result in the creation of a
uniform system of electronic records by Government
offices that are compatible with each
other.
(2) Upon completion of an identification
aid, a Government office shall—
(A) attach a printed copy to the record it
describes;
(B) transmit to the Review Board a
printed copy; and
(C) attach a printed copy to each assassination
record it describes when it is transmitted
to the Archivist.
(3) Assassination records which are in the
possession of the National Archives on the
date of enactment of this Act, and which have
been publicly available in their entirety without
redaction, shall be made available in the
Collection without any additional review by
the Review Board or another authorized
o ffice under this Act, and shall not be
required to have such an identification aid
unless required by the Archivist.
(e) Transmission to the National Archives- Each
Government office shall—
(1) transmit to the Archivist, and make
immediately available to the public, all assassination
records that can be publicly disclosed,
including those that are publicly
available on the date of enactment of this Act,
without any redaction, adjustment, or withholding
under the standards of this Act; and
(2) transmit to the Archivist upon approval
for postponement by the Review Board or
upon completion of other action authorized
by this Act, all assassination records the public
disclosure of which has been postponed,
in whole or in part, under the standards of
this Act, to become part of the protected Collection.
(f) Custody of Postponed Assassination RecordsAn
assassination record the public disclosure
of which has been postponed shall, pending
transmission to the Archivist, be held for reasons
of security and preservation by the originating
body until such time as the informa-
186
tion security program has been established at
the National Archives as required in section
4(e)(2).
(g) Periodic Review of Postponed Assassination
Records-
(1) All postponed or redacted records shall
be reviewed periodically by the originating
agency and the Archivist consistent with the
recommendations of the Review Board under
section 9(c)(3)(B).
(2)
(A) A periodic review shall address the
public disclosure of additional assassination
records in the Collection under the standards
of this Act.
(B) All postponed assassination records
determined to require continued postponement
shall require an unclassified written
description of the reason for such continued
postponement. Such description shall be provided
to the Archivist and published in the
Federal Register upon determination.
(C) The periodic review of postponed
assassination records shall serve to downgrade
and declassify security classified information.
(D) Each assassination record shall be
publicly disclosed in full, and available in the
Collection no later than the date that is 25
years after the date of enactment of this Act,
unless the President certifies, as required by
this Act, that—
(i) continued postponement is made
necessary by an identifiable harm to the military
defense, intelligence operations, law
enforcement, or conduct of foreign relations;
and
(ii) the identifiable harm is of such
gravity that it outweighs the public interest
in disclosure.
(h) Fees for Copying- Executive branch agencies
shall—
(1) charge fees for copying assassination
records; and
(2) grant waivers of such fees pursuant to
the standards established by section 552(a)(4)
of title 5, United States Code.
Section 6:
Grounds for Postponement of Public
Disclosure of Records
Disclosure of assassination records or particular
information in assassination records to
the public may be postponed subject to the
limitations of this Act if there is clear and
convincing evidence that—
(1) the threat to the military defense, intelligence
operations, or conduct of foreign relations
of the United States posed by the public
disclosure of the assassination is of such
gravity that it outweighs the public interest,
and such public disclosure would reveal—
(A) an intelligence agent whose identity
currently requires protection;
(B) an intelligence source or method
which is currently utilized, or reasonably
expected to be utilized, by the United States
Government and which has not been officially
disclosed, the disclosure of which
would interfere with the conduct of intelligence
activities; or
(C) any other matter currently relating
to the military defense, intelligence operations
or conduct of foreign relations of the
United States, the disclosure of which would
demonstrably impair the national security of
the United States;
(2) the public disclosure of the assassination
record would reveal the name or identity
of a living person who provided confidential
information to the United States and would
pose a substantial risk of harm to that person;
(3) the public disclosure of the assassination
record could reasonably be expected to
constitute an unwarranted invasion of personal
privacy, and that invasion of privacy is
so substantial that it outweighs the public
interest;
(4) the public disclosure of the assassination
record would compromise the existence
of an understanding of confidentiality currently
requiring protection between a Government
agent and a cooperating individual
or a foreign government, and public disclosure
would be so harmful that it outweighs
the public interest; or
(5) the public disclosure of the assassination
record would reveal a security or protective
procedure currently utilized, or reasonably
expected to be utilized, by the Secret
Service or another Government agency
responsible for protecting Government officials,
and public disclosure would be so
harmful that it outweighs the public interest.
Section 7:
Establishment and Powers of the
Assassination Records Review Board
(a) Establishment- There is established as an
independent agency a board to be known as
187
the Assassinations Records Review Board.
(b) Appointment-
(1) The President, by and with the advice
and consent of the Senate, shall appoint,
without regard to political affiliation, 5 citizens
to serve as members of the Review
Board to ensure and facilitate the review,
transmission to the Archivist, and public disclosure
of Government records related to the
assassination of President John F. Kennedy.
(2) The President shall make nominations to
the Review Board not later than 90 calendar
days after the date of enactment of this A c t .
(3) If the Senate votes not to confirm a
nomination to the Review Board, the President
shall make an additional nomination
not later than 30 days thereafter.
(4)
(A) The President shall make nominations
to the Review Board after considering
persons recommended by the American Historical
Association, the Organization of
American Historians, the Society of American
Archivists, and the American Bar Association.
(B) If an organization described in subparagraph
(A) does not recommend at least 2
nominees meeting the qualifications stated in
paragraph (5) by the date that is 45 days after
the date of enactment of this Act, the President
shall consider for nomination the persons
recommended by the other organizations
described in subparagraph (A).
(C) The President may request an organization
described in subparagraph (A) to
submit additional nominations.
(5) Persons nominated to the Review
Board—
(A) shall be impartial private citizens,
none of whom is presently employed by any
branch of the Government, and none of
whom shall have had any previous involvement
with any official investigation or
inquiry conducted by a Federal, State, or
local government, relating to the assassination
of President John F. Kennedy;
(B) shall be distinguished persons of
high national professional reputation in their
respective fields who are capable of exercising
the independent and objective judgment
necessary to the fulfillment of their role in
ensuring and facilitating the review, transmission
to the public, and public disclosure
of records related to the assassination of President
John F. Kennedy and who possess an
appreciation of the value of such material to
the public, scholars, and government; and
(C) shall include at least 1 professional
historian and 1 attorney.
(c) Security Clearances-
(1) All Review Board nominees shall be
granted the necessary security clearances in
an accelerated manner subject to the stand
a rd pro c e d u res for granting such cleara
n c e s .
(2) All nominees shall qualify for the necessary
security clearance prior to being considered
for confirmation by the Committee
on Governmental Affairs of the Senate.
(d) Confirmation Hearings-
(1) The Committee on Governmental
Affairs of the Senate shall hold confirmation
hearings within 30 days in which the Senate
is in session after the nomination of 3 Review
Board members.
(2) The Committee on Governmental
Affairs shall vote on the nominations within
14 days in which the Senate is in session after
the confirmation hearings, and shall report
its results to the full Senate immediately.
(3) The Senate shall vote on each nominee
to confirm or reject within 14 days in which
the Senate is in session after reported by the
Committee on Governmental Affairs.
(e) Vacancy- A vacancy on the Review Board
shall be filled in the same manner as specified
for original appointment within 30 days
of the occurrence of the vacancy.
(f) Chairperson- The Members of the Review
Board shall elect one of its members as chairperson
at its initial meeting.
(g) Removal of Review Board Member-
(1) No member of the Review Board shall
be removed from office, other than—
(A) by impeachment and conviction; or
(B) by the action of the President for
inefficiency, neglect of duty, malfeasance in
office, physical disability, mental incapacity,
or any other condition that substantially
impairs the performance of the member’s
duties.
(2)
(A) If a member of the Review Board is
removed from office, and that removal is by
the President, not later than 10 days after the
removal the President shall submit to the
Committee on Government Operations of the
House of Representatives and the Committee
on Governmental Affairs of the Senate a
report specifying the facts found and the
grounds for the removal.
(B) The President shall publish in the
188
Federal Register a report submitted under
paragraph (2)(A), except that the President
may, if necessary to protect the rights of a
person named in the report or to prevent
undue interference with any pending prosecution,
postpone or refrain from publishing
any or all of the report until the completion of
such pending cases or pursuant to privacy
protection requirements in law.
(3)
(A) A member of the Review Board
removed from office may obtain judicial
review of the removal in a civil action commenced
in the United States District Court
for the District of Columbia.
(B) The member may be reinstated or
granted other appropriate relief by order of
the court.
(h) Compensation of Members-
(1) A member of the Review Board shall be
compensated at a rate equal to the daily
equivalent of the annual rate of basic pay
p rescribed for level IV of the Executive
Schedule under section 5315 of title 5, United
States Code, for each day (including travel
time) during which the member is engaged
in the performance of the duties of the
Review Board.
(2) A member of the Review Board shall be
allowed reasonable travel expenses, including
per diem in lieu of subsistence, at rates
for employees of agencies under subchapter I
of chapter 57 of title 5, United States Code,
while away from the member’s home or regular
place of business in the performance of
services for the Review Board.
(i) Duties of the Review Board-
(1) The Review Board shall consider and
render decisions on a determination by a
Government office to seek to postpone the
disclosure of assassination records.
(2) In carrying out paragraph (1), the Review
B o a rd shall consider and render decisions—
(A) whether a re c o rd constitutes an
assassination record; and
(B) whether an assassination record or
particular information in a record qualifies
for postponement of disclosure under this
Act.
(j) Powers-
(1) The Review Board shall have the
authority to act in a manner prescribed under
this Act including authority to—
(A) direct Government offices to complete
identification aids and organize assassination
records;
(B) direct Government offices to transmit
to the A rchivist assassination re c o rds as
re q u i red under this Act, including segregable
portions of assassination re c o rds, and
substitutes and summaries of assassination
re c o rds that can be publicly disclosed to the
fullest extent;
(C)
(i) obtain access to assassination
records that have been identified and organized
by a Government office;
(ii) direct a Government office to
make available to the Review Board, and if
necessary investigate the facts surrounding,
additional information, records, or testimony
from individuals, which the Review Board
has reason to believe is required to fulfill its
functions and responsibilities under this Act;
and
(iii) request the Attorney General to
subpoena private persons to compel testimony,
records, and other information relevant
to its responsibilities under this Act;
(D) require any Government office to
account in writing for the destruction of any
records relating to the assassination of President
John F. Kennedy;
(E) receive information from the public
regarding the identification and public disclosure
of assassination records; and
(F) hold hearings, administer oaths, and
subpoena witnesses and documents.
(2) A subpoena issued under paragraph
(1)(C)(iii) may be enforced by any appropriate
Federal court acting pursuant to a lawful
request of the Review Board.
(k) Witness Immunity- The Review Board
shall be considered to be an agency of the
United States for purposes of section 6001 of
title 18, United States Code.
(l) Oversight-
(1) The Committee on Government Operations
of the House of Representatives and the
Committee on Governmental Affairs of the
Senate shall have continuing oversight jurisdiction
with respect to the official conduct of
the Review Board and the disposition of
postponed records after termination of the
Review Board, and shall have access to any
records held or created by the Review Board.
(2) The Review Board shall have the duty
to cooperate with the exercise of such oversight
jurisdiction.
(m) Support Services- The Administrator of
the General Services Administration shall
p rovide administrative services for the
189
Review Board on a reimbursable basis.
(n) Interpretive Regulations- The Review Board
may issue interpretive regulations.
(o) Termination and Winding up-
(1) The Review Board and the terms of its
members shall terminate not later than 2
years after the date of enactment of this Act,
except that the Review Board may, by majority
vote, extend its term for an additional 1-
year period if it has not completed its work
within that 2-year period.
(2) Upon its termination, the Review Board
shall submit reports to the President and the
Congress including a complete and accurate
accounting of expenditures during its existence,
and shall complete all other reporting
requirements under this Act.
(3) Upon termination and winding up, the
Review Board shall transfer all of its records
to the Archivist for inclusion in the Collection,
and no record of the Review Board shall
be destroyed.
Section 8:
Assassination Records Review Board
Personnel
(a) Executive Director-
(1) Not later than 45 days after the initial
meeting of the Review Board, the Review
B o a rd shall appoint one citizen, without
regard to political affiliation, to the position
of Executive Director.
(2) The person appointed as Executive
Director shall be a private citizen of integrity
and impartiality who is a distinguished professional
and who is not a present employee
of any branch of the Government and has
had no previous involvement with any official
investigation or inquiry relating to the
assassination of President John F. Kennedy.
(3)
(A) A candidate for Executive Director
shall be granted the necessary security clearances
in an accelerated manner subject to the
standard procedures for granting such clearances.
(B) A candidate shall qualify for the necessary
security clearance prior to being
approved by the Review Board.
(4) The Executive Director shall—
(A) serve as principal liaison to Government
offices;
(B) be responsible for the administration
and coordination of the Review Board ’ s
review of records;
(C) be responsible for the administration
of all official activities conducted by the
Review Board; and
(D) have no authority to decide or determine
whether any record should be disclosed
to the public or postponed for disclosure.
(5) The Executive Director shall not be
removed for reasons other than by a majority
vote of the Review Board for cause on the
g rounds of ineff i c i e n c y, neglect of duty,
malfeasance in office, physical disability,
mental incapacity, or any other condition that
substantially impairs the performance of the
responsibilities of the Executive Director or
the staff of the Review Board.
(b) Staff-
(1) The Review Board may, in accordance
with the civil service laws but without regard
to civil service law and regulation for competitive
service as defined in subchapter 1,
chapter 33 of title 5, United States Code,
appoint and terminate additional personnel
as are necessary to enable the Review Board
and its Executive Director to perform its
duties.
(2) A person appointed to the staff of the
Review Board shall be a private citizen of
integrity and impartiality who is not a present
employee of any branch of the Government
and who has had no previous involvement
with any official investigation or
inquiry relating to the assassination of President
John F. Kennedy.
(3)
(A) A candidate for staff shall be granted
the necessary security clearances in an accelerated
manner subject to the standard procedures
for granting such clearances.
(B) A candidate for the staff shall qualify
for the necessary security clearance prior to
being approved by the Review Board.
(c) Compensation- The Review Board shall fix
the compensation of the Executive Director
and other personnel in accordance with title
5, United States Code, except that the rate of
pay for the Executive Director and other personnel
may not exceed the rate payable for
level V of the Executive Schedule under section
5316 of that title.
(d) Advisory Committees-
(1) The Review Board shall have the
authority to create advisory committees to
assist in fulfilling the responsibilities of the
Review Board under this Act.
(2) Any advisory committee created by the
Review Board shall be subject to the Federal
190
Advisory Committee Act (5 U.S.C. App.).
Section 9:
Review of Records by the Assassination
Records Review Board
(a) Custody of Records Reviewed by BoardPending
the outcome of the Review Board’s
review activity, a Government office shall
retain custody of its assassination records for
purposes of preservation, security, and efficiency,
unless—
(1) the Review Board requires the physical
transfer of records for reasons of conducting
an independent and impartial review; or
(2) such transfer is necessary for an administrative
hearing or other official Review
Board function.
(b) Startup Requirements- The Review Board
shall—
(1) not later than 90 days after the date of
its appointment, publish a schedule for
review of all assassination records in the Federal
Register; and
(2) not later than 180 days after the date of
enactment of this Act, begin its review of
assassination records under this Act.
(c) Determinations of the Review Board-
(1) The Review Board shall direct that all
assassination records be transmitted to the
Archivist and disclosed to the public in the
Collection in the absence of clear and convincing
evidence that—
(A) a Government record is not an assassination
record; or
(B) a Government record or particular
information within an assassination record
qualifies for postponement of public disclosure
under this Act.
(2) In approving postponement of public
d i s c l o s u re of an assassination re c o rd, the
Review Board shall seek to—
(A) provide for the disclosure of segregable
parts, substitutes, or summaries of
such a record; and
(B) determine, in consultation with the
originating body and consistent with the stand
a rds for postponement under this Act, which
of the following alternative forms of disclos
u re shall be made by the originating body:
(i) Any reasonably segregable particular
information in an assassination record.
(ii) A substitute record for that information
which is postponed.
(iii) A summary of an assassination
record.
(3) With respect to each assassination
record or particular information in assassination
records the public disclosure of which is
postponed pursuant to section 6, or for which
only substitutions or summaries have been
disclosed to the public, the Review Board
shall create and transmit to the Archivist a
report containing—
(A) a description of actions by the
Review Board, the originating body, the President,
or any Government office (including a
justification of any such action to postpone
d i s c l o s u re of any re c o rd or part of any
record) and of any official proceedings conducted
by the Review Board with regard to
specific assassination records; and
(B) a statement, based on a review of the
proceedings and in conformity with the decisions
reflected therein, designating a recommended
specified time at which or a specified
occurrence following which the material
may be appropriately disclosed to the public
under this Act.
(4)
(A) Following its review and a determination
that an assassination record shall be
publicly disclosed in the Collection or postponed
for disclosure and held in the protected
Collection, the Review Board shall
notify the head of the originating body of its
determination and publish a copy of the
determination in the Federal Register within
14 days after the determination is made.
(B) Contemporaneous notice shall be
made to the President for Review Board
determinations regarding executive branch
assassination records, and to the oversight
committees designated in this Act in the case
of legislative branch re c o rds. Such notice
shall contain a written unclassified justification
for public disclosure or postponement of
disclosure, including an explanation of the
application of any standards contained in
section 6.
(d) Presidential Authority over Review Board
Determination-
(1) Public Disclosure or Postponement of Dis -
closure- After the Review Board has made a
formal determination concerning the public
disclosure or postponement of disclosure of
an executive branch assassination record or
information within such a record, or of any
information contained in an assassination
record, obtained or developed solely within
the executive branch, the President shall
have the sole and nondelegable authority to
191
require the disclosure or postponement of
such record or information under the standards
set forth in section 6, and the President
shall provide the Review Board with an
unclassified written certification specifying
the President’s decision within 30 days after
the Review Board’s determination and notice
to the executive branch agency as required
under this Act, stating the justification for the
President’s decision, including the applicable
grounds for postponement under section 6,
accompanied by a copy of the identification
aid required under section 4.
(2) Periodic Review- Any executive branch
assassination re c o rd postponed by the Pre s ident
shall be subject to the re q u i rements of
periodic re v i e w, downgrading and declassification
of classified information, and public disc
l o s u re in the collection set forth in section 4.
(3) Record of Presidential Postponement- The
Review Board shall, upon its receipt, publish
in the Federal Register a copy of any unclassified
written certification, statement, and
other materials transmitted by or on behalf of
the President with regard to postponement of
assassination records.
(e) Notice to Public- Every 30 calendar days,
beginning on the date that is 60 calendar
days after the date on which the Review
B o a rd first approves the postponement of
d i s c l o s u re of an assassination re c o rd, the
Review Board shall publish in the Federal
Register a notice that summarizes the postponements
approved by the Review Board
or initiated by the President, the House of
R e p resentatives, or the Senate, including a
description of the subject, originating
a g e n c y, length or other physical description,
and each ground for postponement that is
relied upon.
(f) Reports by the Review Board-
(1) The Review Board shall report its activities
to the leadership of the Congress, the
Committee on Government Operations of the
House of Representatives, the Committee on
Governmental Affairs of the Senate, the President,
the Archivist, and the head of any Government
office whose records have been the
subject of Review Board activity.
(2) The first report shall be issued on the
date that is 1 year after the date of enactment
of this Act, and subsequent reports every 12
months thereafter until termination of the
Review Board.
(3) A report under paragraph (1) shall
include the following information:
(A) Afinancial report of the expenses for
all official activities and requirements of the
Review Board and its personnel.
(B) The progress made on review, transmission
to the Archivist, and public disclosure
of assassination records.
(C) The estimated time and volume of
assassination records involved in the completion
of the Review Board’s performance
under this Act.
(D) Any special problems, including
requests and the level of cooperation of Government
offices, with regard to the ability of
the Review Board to operate as required by
this Act.
(E) A record of review activities, including
a record of postponement decisions by
the Review Board or other related actions
authorized by this Act, and a record of the
volume of records reviewed and postponed.
(F) Suggestions and requests to Congre s s
for additional legislative authority needs.
(G) An appendix containing copies of
reports of postponed records to the Archivist
required under section 9(c)(3) made since the
date of the preceding report under this subsection.
(4) At least 90 calendar days before completing
its work, the Review Board shall provide
written notice to the President and Cong
ress of its intention to terminate its
operations at a specified date.
Section 10:
Disclosure of Other Materials and
Additional Study
(a) Materials under Seal of Court-
(1) The Review Board may request the
Attorney General to petition any court in the
United States or abroad to release any information
relevant to the assassination of President
John F. Kennedy that is held under seal
of the court.
(2)
(A) The Review Board may request the
Attorney General to petition any court in the
United States to release any information relevant
to the assassination of President John F.
Kennedy that is held under the injunction of
secrecy of a grand jury.
(B) A request for disclosure of assassination
materials under this Act shall be deemed
to constitute a showing of particularized
need under Rule 6 of the Federal Rules of
Criminal Procedure.
192
(b) Sense of Congress- It is the sense of the
Congress that—
(1) the Attorney General should assist the
Review Board in good faith to unseal any
re c o rds that the Review Board determines to
be relevant and held under seal by a court or
under the injunction of secrecy of a grand jury;
(2) the Secretary of State should contact the
Government of the Republic of Russia and
seek the disclosure of all records of the government
of the former Soviet Union, including
the records of the Komitet Gosudarstvennoy
Bezopasnosti (KGB) and the Glaynoye
Razvedyvatelnoye Upravleniye (GRU), relevant
to the assassination of Pre s i d e n t
Kennedy, and contact any other foreign government
that may hold information relevant
to the assassination of President Kennedy
and seek disclosure of such information; and
(3) all Executive agencies should cooperate
in full with the Review Board to seek the disclosure
of all information relevant to the
assassination of President John F. Kennedy
consistent with the public interest.
Section 11:
Rules of Construction
(a) Precedence over Other Law- When this Act
re q u i res transmission of a re c o rd to the
Archivist or public disclosure, it shall take
precedence over any other law (except section
6103 of the Internal Revenue Code), judicial
decision construing such law, or common
law doctrine that would otherwise prohibit
such transmission or disclosure, with the
exception of deeds governing access to or
transfer or release of gifts and donations of
records to the United States Government.
(b) Freedom of Information Act- Nothing in this
Act shall be construed to eliminate or limit
any right to file requests with any executive
agency or seek judicial review of the decisions
pursuant to section 552 of title 5, United
States Code.
(c) Judicial Review- Nothing in this Act shall
be construed to preclude judicial re v i e w,
under chapter 7 of title 5, United States Code,
of final actions taken or required to be taken
under this Act.
(d) Existing Authority- Nothing in this Act
revokes or limits the existing authority of the
President, any executive agency, the Senate,
or the House of Representatives, or any other
entity of the Government to publicly disclose
records in its possession.
(e) Rules of the Senate and House of Representa -
tives- To the extent that any provision of this
Act establishes a procedure to be followed in
the Senate or the House of Representatives,
such provision is adopted—
(1) as an exercise of the rulemaking power
of the Senate and House of Representatives,
respectively, and is deemed to be part of the
rules of each House, respectively, but applicable
only with respect to the procedure to be
followed in that House, and it supersedes
other rules only to the extent that it is inconsistent
with such rules; and
(2) with full recognition of the constitutional
right of either House to change the
rules (so far as they relate to the procedure of
that House) at any time, in the same manner,
and to the same extent as in the case of any
other rule of that House.
Section 12:
Termination of Effect of Act
(a) Provisions Pertaining to the Review BoardThe
provisions of this Act that pertain to the
appointment and operation of the Review
Board shall cease to be effective when the
Review Board and the terms of its members
have terminated pursuant to section 7(o).
(b) Other Provisions- The remaining provisions
of this Act shall continue in effect until
such time as the Archivist certifies to the
President and the Congress that all assassination
records have been made available to the
public in accordance with this Act.
Section 13:
Authorization of Appropriations
(a) In General- There are authorized to be appropriated
such sums as are necessary to carry out
this Act, to remain available until expended.
(b) Interim Funding- Until such time as funds
a re appropriated pursuant to subsection (a),
the President may use such sums as are available
for discretionary use to carry out this A c t .
Section 14:
Severability
If any provision of this Act or the application
t h e reof to any person or circumstance is held
invalid, the remainder of this Act and the
application of that provision to other persons
not similarly situated or to other circ u m s t a n c e s
shall not be affected by the invalidation.
193
The President John F. Kennedy
Assassination Records Collection
Extension Act of 1994
Section 1:
Short Title
This Act may be cited as the “President John
F. Kennedy Assassination Records Collection
Extension Act of 1994”.
Section 2:
Extension of Act
Section 7(o)(1) of the President John F.
Kennedy Assassination Records Collection
Act of 1992 (44 U.S.C. 2107 note) is
amended—
(1) by striking “2 years after the date of
enactment of this Act” and inserting “September
30, 1996”; and
(2) by striking “2-year”.
Section 3:
Amendments Relating to Review Board
Powers
Section 7(j)(1) of the President John F.
Kennedy Assassination Records Collection
Act of 1992 (44 U.S.C. 2107 note) is
amended—
(1) in subparagraph (E) by striking “and”
after the semicolon;
(2) in subparagraph (F) by striking the
period and inserting “; and”; and
(3) by adding at the end the following:
“(G) use the Federal Supply Service in
the same manner and under the same conditions
as other departments and agencies of
the United States; and
“(H) use the United States mails in the
same manner and under the same conditions
as other departments and agencies of the
United States.”.
Section 4:
Amendments Relating to Review Board
Personnel
(a) Security Clearance for Review Board Person -
n e l- Section 8 of the President John F.
Kennedy Assassination Records Collection
Act of 1992 (44 U.S.C. 2107 note) is amended
by adding at the end the following:
“(e) Security Clearance Required- An individual
employed in any position by the Review
Board (including an individual appointed as
Executive Director) shall be required to qualify
for any necessary security clearance prior
to taking office in that position, but may be
employed conditionally in accordance with
subsection (b)(3)(B) before qualifying for that
clearance.”.
(b) Appointment and Termination of Staff, Gen -
erally- Section 8(b) of the President John F.
Kennedy Assassination Records Collection
Act of 1992 (44 U.S.C. 2107 note) is amended
by striking “(b) Staff- ” and all that follows
through the end of paragraph (1) and inserting
the following:
“(b) Staff- (1) The Review Board, without
regard to the civil service laws, may appoint
and terminate additional personnel as are
necessary to enable the Review Board and its
Executive Director to perform the duties of
the Review Board.”.
(c) Review Board Administrative Staff- Section
8(b)(2) of the President John F. Kennedy
Assassination Records Collection Act of 1992
(44 U.S.C. 2107 note) is amended—
(1) by striking “A person” and inserting
“(A) Except as provided in subparagraph (B),
a person”; and
(2) by adding at the end the following:
“(B) An individual who is an employee
of the Government may be appointed to the
staff of the Review Board if in that position
the individual will perform only administrative
functions.”.
(d) Conditional Employment of Staff- Section
8(b)(3)(B) of the President John F. Kennedy
Assassination Records Collection Act of 1992
(44 U.S.C. 2107 note) is amended to read as
follows:
“(B)
(i) The Review Board may offer conditional
employment to a candidate for a staff
position pending the completion of security
clearance background investigations. During
the pendency of such investigations, the
Review Board shall ensure that any such
employee does not have access to, or responsibility
involving, classified or otherwise
restricted assassination record materials.
(ii) If a person hired on a conditional basis
under clause (i) is denied or otherwise does
not qualify for all security clearances necessary
to carry out the responsibilities of the
position for which conditional employment
has been offered, the Review Board shall
immediately terminate the person’s employment.”.
194
(e) Compensation of Staff- Section 8(c) of the
P resident John F. Kennedy A s s a s s i n a t i o n
Records Collection Act of 1992 (21 U.S.C.
2107 note) is amended to read as follows:
“(c) Compensation- Subject to such rules as
may be adopted by the Review Board, the
chairperson, without regard to the provisions
of title 5, United States Code, governing
appointments in the competitive service and
without regard to the provisions of chapter
51 and subchapter III of chapter 53 of that
title relating to classification and General
Schedule pay rates, may—
(1) appoint an Executive Dire c t o r, who shall
be paid at a rate not to exceed the rate of basic
pay for level V of the Executive Schedule; and
(2) appoint and fix compensation of such
other personnel as may be necessary to carry......


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