[Intelligence Report: Dallas Morning News Clipping, May 28, 1982] (open access)

[Intelligence Report: Dallas Morning News Clipping, May 28, 1982]

Intelligence report which includes a newspaper clipping from the Dallas Morning News. The article states that Fidel Castro told the FBI in 1964 that Lee Harvey Oswald approached Cuban authorities with an offer to kill President Kennedy.
Date: May 28, 1982
Creator: Dallas (Tex.). Police Department.
System: The Portal to Texas History
[Memo to W. R. Rollins from Jack L. Beavers, January 28, 1988] (open access)

[Memo to W. R. Rollins from Jack L. Beavers, January 28, 1988]

Memorandum addressed to Captain W. R. Rollins of the Intelligence Division in Dallas, Texas. The memorandum states that the son of the late Roscoe Anthony White, Ricky Don White, suspected that his father was involved in the Kennedy assassination. It was found that Roscoe Anthony White and Lee Harvey Oswald served tours in a Light Helicopters Unit in El Toro, California at the same time. It is unknown whether they knew each other.
Date: January 28, 1988
Creator: Dallas (Tex.). Police Department.
System: The Portal to Texas History
[Memo by Sam C. Gonzales, September 19, 1984] (open access)

[Memo by Sam C. Gonzales, September 19, 1984]

Memorandum by Sam C. Gonzales which informs individuals that, as the Identification Division still receives requests for documents relating to the Kennedy assassination, requests should be referred to the National Archives.
Date: September 19, 1984
Creator: Dallas (Tex.). Police Department.
System: The Portal to Texas History
[Intelligence Report: Dallas Morning News Clipping, May 28, 1982] (open access)

[Intelligence Report: Dallas Morning News Clipping, May 28, 1982]

Intelligence report which includes a newspaper clipping from the Dallas Morning News. The article states that Fidel Castro told the FBI in 1964 that Lee Harvey Oswald approached Cuban authorities with an offer to kill President Kennedy.
Date: May 28, 1982
Creator: Dallas (Tex.). Police Department.
System: The Portal to Texas History