The Daily Courier

Some JFK files withheld

Trump holding back some records on 1963 assassinat­ion for now at request of CIA, FBI

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WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump acted Thursday to block the release of hundreds of records on the John F. Kennedy assassinat­ion, bending to CIA and FBI appeals to keep those secrets.

“I have no choice,” Trump said in a memo, according to White House officials. He was placing those files under a six-month review while letting 2,800 other records come out Thursday evening, racing a deadline to honour a law mandating their release.

Officials say Trump will impress upon federal agencies that JFK files should stay secret after the six-month review “only in the rarest cases.”

Much of Thursday passed with nothing from the White House or National Archives except silence, leaving unclear how the government would comply with a law requiring the records to come out by the end of the day — unless Trump had been persuaded by intelligen­ce agencies to hold some back.

White House officials said the FBI and CIA made the most requests within the government to withhold some informatio­n.

No blockbuste­rs had been expected in the last trove of secret files regarding Kennedy’s assassinat­ion Nov. 22, 1963, given a statement months ago by the Archives that it assumed the records, then under preparatio­n, would be “tangential” to what’s known about the killing.

But for historians, it’s a chance to answer lingering questions, put some unfounded conspiracy theories to rest, perhaps give life to other theories — or none of that, if the material adds little to the record.

Researcher­s were frustrated by the uncertaint­y that surrounded the release for much of the day.

“The government has had 25 years — with a known end-date — to prepare #JFKfiles for release,” University of Virginia historian Larry Sabato tweeted in the afternoon. “Deadline is here. Chaos.”

Asked what he meant, Sabato emailed to say: “Contradict­ory signals were given all day. Trump’s tweets led us to believe that disclosure was ready to go. Everybody outside government was ready to move quickly.”

Experts say the publicatio­n of the last trove of evidence could help allay suspicions of a conspiracy — at least for some.

“As long as the government is withholdin­g documents like these, it’s going to fuel suspicion that there is a smoking gun out there about the Kennedy assassinat­ion,” said Patrick Maney, a presidenti­al historian at Boston College.

The collection includes more than 3,100 records — comprising hundreds of thousands of pages — that have never been seen by the public. About 30,000 documents were released previously — with redactions.

Whatever details are released, they’re not expected to give a definitive answer to a question that still lingers for some: Whether anyone other than Lee Harvey Oswald was involved in the assassinat­ion.

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