The ledger reveals a secret account holding $2.3 million (approximately $21 million today) labeled "Fondo Especial: Noviembre 22." That date, of course, is November 22, 1963.

Now, evidence—recently declassified FBI files, a lost memoir found in a Beaumont attic, and DNA-driven genealogical research—has shattered the old narratives. The "new" Parr family secrets are not just about ballot stuffing. They are about murder, missing treasure, a hidden heir, and a direct, suppressed link to Dealey Plaza.

The vault is open. The windmill has been drained. And the Parr family, at last, has no secrets left. This article is based on a synthesis of recent archival releases, forensic data, and historical research as of 2026. For primary sources, consult the Treviño Ledger digital archive (UT-Austin) and the DOJ's "Project Blue Windmill" preliminary report.

The "new" Parr family secrets tell us one terrifying truth: The assassination of John F. Kennedy was not the work of a lone gunman or a rogue CIA cell. It was the last, desperate act of a dying political machine that blackmailed a future president (LBJ) into giving them federal protection. And for 50 years, they got away with it.

For decades, the name "Parr" has been a ghost rattling chains in the attic of South Texas history. To the casual observer, the Parr family—led by the infamous "Duke of Duval," George B. Parr—was merely a footnote in the 1960s Kennedy assassination lore. But to historians, journalists, and forensic genealogists, the Parrs represent the most successful, brutal, and secretive political machine in American history. They stole more votes than Tammany Hall, buried more bodies than the Chicago Outfit, and held a chokehold on the Nueces River Valley for over sixty years.

A genealogical study using autosomal DNA from three distant Parr cousins, cross-referenced with a 2025 consumer ancestry database, has identified a direct male-line descendant living under an assumed name in Louisiana. Let’s call him "John."