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Inside QAnon’s JFK Jr conspiracy

Why some QAnon believers think JFK Jr is still alive – and about to become vice president

A theory considered too far-fetched even for most followers of the Q conspiracy could still be a cause for concern, write Justin Vallejo and Phil Thomas

Tuesday 18 January 2022 12:08 EST
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JFK Jr and Vincent Fusca, who some conspiracy theorists believe are the same person
JFK Jr and Vincent Fusca, who some conspiracy theorists believe are the same person (George De Sota/Liaison/Twitter @TheGoodLiars)

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Conspiracy theorist group QAnon hit a bizarre milestone in November 2021, when its supporters gathered for what they hoped would be the return of the late JFK Jr – who, they believed, would be running on an imagined 2024 ticket with former president Donald Trump.

John Fitzgerald Kennedy Jr’s plane was pulled out of the Atlantic Ocean more than 24 years ago in a crash that killed him, his wife Carolyn and his sister-in-law, Lauren Bessette.

For some QAnon true believers, however, the son of the 35th president of the United States not only survived the tragedy but is poised to make a dramatic return to public life.

A bizarre theory duly emerged suggesting that the accident had just been a ruse to fake his death and that he will re-emerge to join a reinstated President Trump as his VP.

And those devotees gathered in November 2021 for what they expected would be a dramatic revelation at the AT&T Discovery Plaza in Dallas – but was in fact more of a damp squib.

When JFK Jr, unsurprisingly, failed to make an appearance, people in the crowd suggested he would in fact make an appearance at a Rolling Stones concert later that day.

Of course, he also failed to attend that event.

The crowds gathered at Dealey Plaza in Dallas, Texas
The crowds gathered at Dealey Plaza in Dallas, Texas (YouTube/AFP)

When Mr Trump appeared at his first rally of 2022 in Arizona, some QAnon adherents suggested it wasn’t really him but perhaps a double – and perhaps even JFK Jr himself disguised as the former president.

With continued speculation that the deceased Kennedy is still alive, a viral video that emerged in 2021 has even shown a middle-aged man that some QAnon devotees insist is JFK Jr himself.

The theory is strange even by the standards of QAnon – which claims Democrats and Hollywood celebrities are involved in a secret cannibalistic cult which Mr Trump is secretly battling, a theory expounded in cryptic internet messages by a mysterious prophet-like figure known as Q.

And while only a fraction appear to believe the JFK Jr angle, experts say it is still damaging to their relationships and their grasp on reality.

QAnon supporters gather in hope JFK Jr returns from dead

Will Sommer, author of the book Trust the Plan: The Rise of QAnon and the Conspiracy That Reshaped America and a longtime observer of the conspiracy theory, estimates that about 20 per cent of Q followers believe in JFK Jr’s re-emergence, but that those who do, “100 per cent believe”.

“QAnon itself is obviously pretty dangerous. It’s hard to say whether the people who believe the JFK Jr [conspiracy] are more dangerous than the QAnon people who don’t,” he told The Independent.

“Part of the problem, just like with any QAnon belief, is that it’s so bizarre that it alienates people from their friends and family.”

But how did “John John” – poignantly pictured saluting his assassinated father’s coffin at the age of three – come to be drawn into such an outlandish fantasy?

A memorial to John F Kennedy Jr following his death featuring a metal sculpture recalling his salute, aged three, to his father’s funeral cortege in 1963
A memorial to John F Kennedy Jr following his death featuring a metal sculpture recalling his salute, aged three, to his father’s funeral cortege in 1963 (AFP/Getty)

The story goes that after faking his death, Kennedy returned two decades later to help Mr Trump drain the swamp. First, he supposedly appeared as Q himself (or close to Q) with the “Q drops” of cryptic information. Then, he was to have revealed himself in 2019, to replace Mike Pence on the president’s 2020 re-election ticket, or maybe the 2021 “reinstatement” (scheduled for 13 August 2022, although there is no mechanism for reinstating a former president, which again proved a disappointment), or maybe the 2024 campaign.

The timeline has kept shifting with each passing milestone.

In the meantime, the lore goes, Kennedy has been in hiding, disguised as a middle-aged, fedora-wearing financial services manager from Pittsburgh named Vincent Fusca.

JFK Jr began trending on Twitter after the comedy duo The Good Liars spotted Mr Fusca at the CPAC conservative conference in July in a video that went viral with 14,000 likes and 2,000 retweets.

“Are you JFK Jr? Yes or No? How did you survive the plane crash? Or was it faked? Wink twice if you’re JFK Jr,” the pair asked him.

Their target, apparently no longer 6ft 1in tall, and wearing a pro-Trump shirt saying, “ We want you back, Sir, we miss you Mr President”, responded: “I don’t know who you are man – oh, he’s filming, we got to get going.”

Mr Fusca did not immediately respond to The Independent’s request for an interview. But it’s unclear which is the real Vincent Fusca as several Twitter accounts invoke the name of the man some believe to be a reincarnated JFK Jr.

One Twitter account @vincent_fusca with 134,000 followers, tweeted in the early hours of 7 January 2021 – the day after a pro-Trump mob stormed the US Capitol to try to prevent Joe Biden’s victory being certified – a mysterious poem featuring lines like “Surrounded by Truth you see them attack/Do they Eternally want freedom intact?… Soon you’ll be shown the republic where we emancipate at.”

Another account, @Vincent__Fusca, describes himself as a loving husband, father, patriot and Trump supporter with an undying love for the US.

Yet another is called “VINCENT FUSCA HAS OFFICIALLY RETURNED“. He hasn’t fully tweeted since Mr Biden won the election in November, but preaches his own resurrection: “My return was slated for 7/4/20- The date has moved up; VINCE FUSCA IS BACK- JFK JR IS RISEN!”

The theory appears to have emerged from an April 2018 Q drop resurfacing a pre-Q era theory in which JFK Jr’s 1999 plane crash was orchestrated by the Clintons, supposedly to prevent him running for the New York Senate seat later won by Hillary Clinton.

Fact-checkers from Snopes had tackled this older strain of the conspiracy when it spread during the 2016 election, pointing to a New York Daily News article in an effort to debunk it.

Daily News journalist Joel Siegel wrote four days after Kennedy’s death that two friends confirmed the “best-kept” secrets in politics, that he had been seeking the seat.

“The idea became moot once first lady Hillary Rodham Clinton signalled her interest in running, but the two friends said they expected the son of the slain president eventually would have jumped into politics as a candidate,” the story said.

“The second friend called Kennedy’s interest ‘pretty serious,’ adding: ‘I think he was intrigued by the idea… Would he have decided in the end to go for it? I don’t know. But he was clearly thinking about it. He talked to a few people about it. Then the Hillary thing ended it pretty quickly.”

Writing for The Daily Beast, Mr Sommer has been following the evolution of that shifting pre-Q conspiracy, into a Q-conspiracy, since it emerged on the 4Chan and 8Chan messaging boards around October 2017.

John F Kennedy Jr with President Bill Clinton at the White House in 1998
John F Kennedy Jr with President Bill Clinton at the White House in 1998 (AFP/Getty)

The summer of that year, a new poster going simply by “R”, later dubbed Ranon, connected the existing conspiracy that Kennedy faked his death by saying he did it to become Q so that he could help his friend, Mr Trump, become president.

The supposed evidence: Mr Trump met Russian president Vladimir Putin in Helsinki on 16 July, the 19th anniversary of Kennedy’s fatal plane crash.

Mr Sommer says that for many QAnon believers, this theory is a step too far.

“There is this funny dynamic in QAnon both with JFK Jr and other stuff where they say, ‘Oh I believe that world elites drink children’s blood and all this kind of stuff, but ‘WOAH JFK Jr, that’s the crazy one’.

“I think it’s just so farcical on its face that they’re kind of embarrassed by it, if someone comes out and says I think world elites sometimes abuse their power to abuse children – that doesn’t sound that crazy. If someone were to come out and say, ‘I think JFK Jr was still alive’ – so yeah they find it embarrassing.”

Rolling Stone writer EJ Dickson continued pulling the thread and found the idea gained popularity after George W Bush campaign staffer turned investigative journalist Liz Crokin, formerly of The Chicago Tribune and National Inquirer, began tweeting and talking about the theory in 2018.

“Right after I shared this on Twitter there was a hit piece written about me and I’m thinking, that’s really crazy, that is so bizarre, I just tweeted a theory that wasn’t even my own, and said this is interesting and next thing there’s a hit piece about me, calling me names… so that made me think, there’s something to this,” she said in a YouTube interview.

“The way that Q talks about JFK Sr in the posts, it is with such love and passion, it makes me think that it is someone that is close to him. To me, if JFK Jr faked his death and was alive, it would make sense that he was Q.”

More evidence came in the form of an (unverified) quote from Kennedy published in his George magazine just one month before his death.

John F Kennedy Jr pictured on 5 May 1989
John F Kennedy Jr pictured on 5 May 1989 (AFP/Getty)

He said: “If my dear friend Donald Trump ever decided to sacrifice his fabulous billionaire lifestyle to become president he would be an unstoppable force for ultimate justice that Democrats and Republicans alike would celebrate”.

The two were friends, and the photo of them together used in the post was real, from a New York Knicks game in March 1999, three months before the June 1999 issue the quote claimed to be from. The closest quote fact-checkers from the Poynter Institute’s PolitiFact found was from a story in The New York Post in November 2016 from Michael Berman, co-founder of George magazine, when Mr Trump and Kennedy schmoozed at Mar-a-Lago.

“As frequently happened to Kennedy at his events, talk soon turned to whether he could envision himself running for president. Trying to deflect the presidential chatter, Kennedy noted that the Trump estate was far more glamorous than a Kennedy family compound a few miles away. ‘I think you should be asking those questions of Donald,’ Kennedy said, according to Berman. ‘He’d clearly have the most extravagant winter White House.’”

Kennedy crashed the Piper Saratoga plane he was flying – with his wife and sister-in-law as passengers – into the Atlantic near Martha’s Vineyard on 16 July 1999. Their bodies were found five days later. The latest tragedy to befall a family apparently haunted by misfortune made headlines around the world.

For his supposed return at a Fourth of July rally in 2019, some supporters carried JFK Jr facemasks.

Others carried Trump JFK Jr 2020 flags or wore his likeness on their shirts, shouting “He’s alive”. Mr Sommer says supporters cheer and interact with Mr Fusca when they see him and ask him if he is really JFK Jr.

“His whole deal is that he’s very cryptic about it. He obviously knows what’s going on but he doesn’t comment on it,” Mr Sommer says.

“He talks about Q and stuff like that. But when I’m like, I want to talk about how people think you’re JFK Jr, he doesn’t do that.”

Spotting Mr Fusca in the background of MAGA rallies and GOP events has become a popular sport for some QAnon followers.

He was seen at Mr Trump’s Ohio rally on 26 June 2021, according to Patriot Takes, and before that was seen at CPAC on a number of occasions.

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