John Kennedy
The national archives of the United States published nearly four thousand documents related to the assassination of the 35th President John Fitzgerald Kennedy, among which there are audio recordings of the testimony of former KGB agent Yuri Nosenko about Lee Harvey Oswald, the Prime suspect in this crime. Documents available on the website of the National archives of the United States.
From 3810 documents previously kept secret was 441. Another 3369 documents were published in part. In one of the 17 audio recordings with the testimony of Nosenko said that in 1959-1962 handled the case of Lee Harvey Oswald while he lived in the USSR.
Officer of the Second chief Directorate of the KGB of the USSR Yuri Nosenko had served in the KGB of the USSR since 1953. In February 1964, while in Geneva on secondment as safety officer in the Soviet delegation at the negotiations on disarmament, made contact with the CIA and asked for political asylum. Nosenko gave the Americans the information that Oswald was not a KGB agent. However, his data differed from those that the CIA provided another Soviet defector, former KGB agent Anatoliy Golitsyn. In 1969, Nosenko became a full-time employee of the CIA. In 2008, he died.
35th U.S. President John Fitzgerald Kennedy was fatally shot during a trip to Dallas November 22, 1963. According to the official version, his killer was a loner named Lee Harvey Oswald who shot the President from a sniper rifle from a distance. The circumstances of the death of the President, still cause controversy and conspiracy theories.