JFKs Secret Mistress Breaks 60yr Silence

JFK’s Secret Mistress Breaks 60yr Silence

Nearly sixty years after the assassination of Democrat President John F. Kennedy, his secret mistress is breaking her silence to make their alleged love affair public.

An 83 year old woman from New York has finally decided to speak out about her alleged affair with JFK in an article for Air Mail, a news outlet owned by Graydon Carter, former editor of Vanity Fair.

Alleged JFK mistress Diana de Vegh described in her article how she was courted by John F. Kennedy in 1958, when she was just a 20 year old student attending Radcliffe College.

The alleged mistress told the world in detail how JFK, who was married at the time, asked her on a date.

“In my closet, my dresses chittered and chattered, fluffing their sleeves and whisking their hems, vying for my attention. As I would be vying for his attention, as soon as I saw him again,” de Vegh wrote.

According to the mistress, her alleged love affair with JFK endured for years, but he became colder as time went on. De Vegh claims that the affair ultimately ended just a year before the then-president was assassinated.

In a statement released to the New York Post, de Vegh discussed her reasons for going public about the affair at this time, stating that she chose to do so in order to encourage other women to speak out if they are in relationships with unequal power dynamics.

“The whole idea of conferred specialness—‘You go to bed with me, I’ll make you special’—we’ve seen a lot of that with Harvey Weinstein, Roger Ailes, show business,” the alleged JFK mistress stated.

Though it is a relatively common occurrence to see women claiming, without evidence, to have had affairs with high level men, this story from de Vegh is not completely out of the blue.

According to the news outlet People, “Though de Vegh had never spoken publicly in this way, her account of their years-long relationship didn’t arrive entirely out of the blue. Descriptions of their alleged affair were previously published in Vanity Fair editor Sally Bedell Smith’s 2004 book about the Kennedys, Grace and Power.”

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