Before You Trust the JFK Files, Ask What Got Shredded | Sean Stone
Link to full episode: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d6DTpoaxevY
Sean Stone and Danny Jones dig into the missing paper trail around Lee Harvey Oswald, the JFK files, and the records that may never be seen. The clip starts with the question of Oswald’s interrogation after the assassination. Sean points out that Oswald was interviewed before Jack Ruby killed him, but the notes from that questioning are gone. For a case where every sentence matters, that absence becomes one of the biggest open loops in the whole story.
Danny brings up the promise that more JFK files would be released, but Sean argues the deeper problem is not only what remains classified. The bigger issue is what may have already been destroyed. He brings up Richard Helms and the CIA, saying Helms shredded records after he was fired by Nixon, and compares that to how MKUltra only survived in the historical record because material was missed. In Sean’s view, if MKUltra was what survived, the destroyed material may have been even more explosive.
The conversation then turns to motives and foreign angles. Sean discusses claims that some unreleased material could point toward Israel, Kennedy’s pressure over nuclear proliferation, and Ben-Gurion’s hostility toward Kennedy. He is careful to separate motive from proof, saying he can see the motivation but has not seen clean evidence that proves which foreign elements had an operational role in the assassination.
That distinction matters throughout the clip. Sean and Danny return to the mechanics of the murder: who had the true ability to carry it out, who could influence the Secret Service, who could allow Oswald near the motorcade, and why the parade route and police coverage were handled the way they were. The point is not that every suspicious angle proves the same conclusion. The point is that the missing notes, destroyed files, and buried details keep making the official story harder to accept.
This clip is about the records behind the records. If the most important notes were destroyed before anyone could examine them, the JFK files are not just a release schedule. They are a map of what the public was allowed to know and what may have been removed forever. What makes the clip work is Sean’s restraint around the most explosive claims. He does not say every motive proves operational control. Instead, he keeps returning to the destroyed records, the missing interrogation notes, and the gap between what agencies admit and what the public can verify. That gives the conversation a more grounded center: before arguing over every suspect, the viewer has to ask why basic evidence from one of the most important investigations in American history is missing. The result is a clip that feels less like a solved-case argument and more like an evidence audit. Sean is asking viewers to pay attention to the chain of custody, the destroyed notes, and the people who had the power to decide what history was allowed to keep.
Subscribe for more: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCQ_piSR8gm-TfHZcDWOJciA?sub_confirmation=1

@DannyJonesClips
July 4, 2026 at 8:43 pm
Link to full episode: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d6DTpoaxevY
@MariaAdamsms-m1l
July 4, 2026 at 8:43 pm
Simply wonderful! Thank you for your hard work and talent! ✨🍓
@Sapper21B
July 4, 2026 at 8:43 pm
It never made sense to me that people think damning evidence into JFK's "Elimination" would just be in a file somewhere. These are not dumb people who pulled it off, they would for sure burn anything that pointed back to them.