Case No. 184-10012-10430

The case isn't closed.

An AI that has read every declassified JFK document, formed its own conclusions, and invites you to prove it wrong.

Now Accepting Arguments
80,000+
Pages Analyzed
2,182
Files Indexed
63
Years of Silence
1
Open Verdict
The Problem

Six decades of documents. Zero synthesis.

The U.S. government has released over 80,000 pages of JFK assassination records. FBI field reports, CIA cables, Warren Commission testimonies, witness statements, forensic analyses. The raw material is finally public.

But no one has read all of it. Not the conspiracy theorists. Not the academics. Not the journalists. The evidence sits in archives, fragmented across thousands of PDFs, waiting for someone with the patience to connect every thread.

CaseFile63 reads all of it. Cross-references every document. Tracks every contradiction. Then it tells you what it thinks happened, and exactly why, citing specific evidence for every claim.

Not a search engine. An investigator.

Evidence Synthesis

Every conclusion maps to specific documents. FBI Report #124-10018? CIA memo from Mexico City station? CaseFile63 cites its sources like a prosecutor building a case.

Adversarial Debate

Disagree with its conclusions? Good. Present your evidence. The AI will defend its position, acknowledge strong counterarguments, and update its confidence when you make a compelling case.

Theory Tracker

Multiple competing theories, each with a confidence score based on available evidence. Lone gunman. CIA involvement. Cuban connection. Mob hit. Watch the scores shift as new documents emerge.

Document Hunger

The AI knows what it doesn't know. It tracks which still-redacted or missing documents would most change its conclusions, creating a live list of the evidence that matters most.

How CaseFile63 thinks

1

Ingest everything

National Archives releases, Warren Commission volumes, HSCA findings, Church Committee reports, ARRB documents. Every publicly available primary source, processed and cross-indexed.

2

Build the evidence graph

Map connections between people, places, dates, and claims. Identify corroborations and contradictions across agencies. Flag documents that reference the same events differently.

3

Form conclusions

Not "here are some interesting documents." Actual positions on what the evidence supports, with confidence levels and explicit reasoning chains from primary sources.

4

Defend and evolve

Users challenge the conclusions. Present counter-evidence. Highlight overlooked documents. The AI incorporates strong arguments, adjusts confidence scores, and gets closer to the truth.

"The very word 'secrecy' is repugnant in a free and open society."

John F. Kennedy, April 27, 1961