Social Security numbers and other private information unmasked in JFK files
The data belongs to more than 200 former congressional staffers and others with connections to decades-old investigations.
March 19, 2025 The Washington Post
Joseph
diGenova, a former attorney for the Trump campaign, was among those
whose private information was made public in the release of documents on
the assassination of President John F. Kennedy. (Photo By Tom
Williams/CQ Roll Call via AP Images) (Tom Williams/CQ Roll Call/AP)
The
Social Security numbers and other private information of more than 200
former congressional staffers and others were made public Tuesday in the
unredacted files related to the assassination of President John F.
Kennedy, according to a review by The Washington Post.
“It’s
absolutely outrageous. It’s sloppy, unprofessional,” said former Trump
campaign lawyer Joseph diGenova, 80, whose private information was
included in the release.
“It
not only means identity theft, but I’ve had threats against me,” said
diGenova — a fixture in Republican and Washington legal circles who has
fiercely defended President Donald Trump and has pounced on Trump’s
critics on cable news. “In the past, I’ve had to report real threats
against me to the FBI. There are dangerous nuts out there.”
More
than 60,000 pages related to the 1963 assassination were released this
week by the Trump administration. Many of the pages had been previously
disclosed, but with redactions. Many, but not all, redactions have been
removed. The records have been posted to the National Archives webpage under the headline “JFK Assassination Records — 2025 Documents Release.”
The
Post, in its review of the previously redacted material, discovered the
Social Security numbers, birthplaces and birth dates of more than 100
staff members of the Senate Church Committee, established in 1975 to
investigate abuses by America’s intelligence agencies and government.
The Post also discovered more than 100 Social Security numbers of staff
members of the House Select Committee on Assassinations, which
investigated the killing of Kennedy. Many of the individuals are still
alive.
The Department of Justice had no comment Wednesday evening. The National Archives did not respond to a request for comment.
The release of the information raises legal questions under the Privacy Act of 1974, according to experts.
“Social
Security is literally the keys to the kingdom to everybody,” said Mary
Ellen Callahan, former chief privacy officer at the Department of
Homeland Security. “It’s absolutely a Privacy Act violation.”
Many
whose Social Security numbers were exposed had become high-ranking
officials in Washington. They include a former assistant secretary of
state, a former U.S. ambassador, researchers in the intelligence world,
State Department workers and prominent lawyers.
In
announcing the release of the material Tuesday, The Office of the
Director of National Intelligence said the roughly 80,000 pages were
“previously-classified records that will be published with no
redactions.”
“It’s
astonishing that our personal information is now just out there for
anyone to see. Someone dropped the ball,” said Loch Johnson, a retired
intelligence expert and professor emeritus at the University of Georgia.
“I hope they weren’t as sloppy in the JFK files with covert agents and
assets overseas.”
Mark
Zaid, a national security attorney who fought for the JFK records to be
made public, called the release of private information “incredibly
irresponsible.”
“In
some of these documents, the only thing that was being redacted for the
last 20-plus years was someone’s Social Security number,” Zaid said.
“It is dangerous for these individuals, who can now be doxed.”
DiGenova
said he had no idea his name and personal information — including his
Social Security number and date and place of birth — were included in
the JFK files until a Post reporter called him while he was shopping for
groceries.
“It
makes sense that my name is in there,” he said, because of his work in
the 1970s investigating intelligence abuses, “but the other sensitive
stuff — it’s like a first-grade, elementary-level rule of security to
redact things like that.”
“It
was fascinating work,” diGenova said. “One of the lawyers on our team
located the girlfriend of a mafia guy who was supposedly seeing JFK at
the same time. He found her in Nevada or Arizona and got chased away by
her husband. Other work we did was looking into assassination plots
against Castro and people who were assets of the CIA. Incredible stuff.”
DiGenova
said the government should pay to help protect those who had their
personal information released, as some companies do with credit score
agencies after a data breach.
At
its peak, the Church Committee had 150 staffers. According to Senate
records, the select committee held 126 meetings, interviewed 800-some
witnesses and combed through 110,000 documents, and it identified abuses
by multiple agencies, including the CIA, FBI, Internal Revenue Service
and National Security Agency.
In
the unredacted files, the former Church Committee staffers’ names and
personal information appear in tidy typewritten columns on pages that
list which of them had been cleared for “access to classified
information up to and including TOP SECRET.”
“This
was in the wake of Watergate and Nixon,” said one former Senate
staffer, who spoke on the condition anonymity to avoid becoming a target
of identity theft. “The whole idea was to unveil the secret, illegal
activities going on.”
That
former staffer, who later worked for the State Department, said she was
furious at now having to worry about financial fraud and identity
theft. “It just shows the danger of how this administration is handling
these things with no thought of who gets damaged in the process.”
Three
other former staffers for the committee said that since learning from
The Post that their Social Security numbers had become public, they had
called their banks to freeze their accounts and credit cards. One had
started to talk to others about whether it would be possible to sue the
National Archives.
“It seems like the damage is done, but clearly we have to talk to some lawyers,” that former staffer said.
Christopher
Pyle, a former Army officer, exposed the Army’s hidden domestic
intelligence operations and testified before Congress. He said his
activities as a whistleblower landed him on the Nixon administration’s “enemies list.”
Pyle was unaware that his Social Security number had become public until a Post reporter reached him by phone Wednesday.
“I’m fascinated that this ended up in the released papers,” he said. “Good Lord, government doing foolish things as usual.”
Pyle
said he worried about how the disclosure will affect those who worked
so hard in the 1970s to uncover nefarious government actions. “Why did
they even have anything on the Church Committee?” he said. “I would be
interested to know that.”
Jonathan
Edwards, Kyle Rempfer, Alec Dent, Evan Hill, Azi Paybarah, Alexandra
Tirado Oropeza, Anthony J. Rivera, Anumita Kaur, Beck Snyder, Ben
Brasch, Ben Pauker, Chris Dehghanpoor, Daniel Wu, Danielle Newman, Elana
Gordon, Hari Raj, HyoJung Kim, Ian Shapira, Jada Yuan, Jorge Ribas,
Kelly Kasulis Cho, Kelsey Ables, Kim Bellware, Leo Sands, Meghan Hoyer,
Kyle Melnick, Tom Jackman, Niha Masih, Razzan Nakhlawi, Sally Jenkins,
Sarah Cahlan, Tobi Raji, Joseph Menn and Vivian Ho contributed to this
report.