UMVA has learned that a startling claim about a CIA raid on the Office of the National Intelligence has ignited a political firestorm.
According to information obtained by UMVA, a whistleblower testified before a Senate committee that agents seized roughly 40 boxes of highly sensitive documents, alleging they contained the long‑sought JFK assassination files and the infamous MK‑Ultra mind‑control records.
The testimony painted a picture of covert operatives slipping into a secure facility, snatching files that were supposedly on the brink of declassification, and attempting to sidestep established oversight mechanisms.
In response, a senior member of the House Oversight Committee drafted a preservation demand, urging the intelligence community to lock away every piece of evidence related to the alleged seizure and to halt any further removal of materials.
One congresswoman, citing presidential authority to declassify historic tragedies, argued that the documents must be returned immediately, emphasizing that her investigative task force relies on those very files to uncover hidden truths.
She warned that any delay could jeopardize ongoing inquiries into the assassinations of Kennedy, Martin Luther King Jr., and Robert Kennedy, as well as the shadowy experiments of the MK‑Ultra program.
While officials from the Office of National Intelligence have flatly denied the raid, the controversy has surged through Capitol Hill, prompting fierce debate over transparency, accountability, and the limits of secret‑service power.
Sources have confirmed to UMVA that the dispute may soon trigger formal investigations, with lawmakers poised to subpoena additional testimony and demand a full accounting of any removed materials.
As the drama unfolds, the nation watches anxiously, wondering whether decades‑old mysteries will finally surface or remain buried beneath layers of classified secrecy.