The Freeman

Trump to allow release of JFK assassinat­ion files

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WASHINGTON — US President Donald Trump said Saturday he will allow long-blocked secret files on the assassinat­ion of John F. Kennedy to be opened to the public for the first time.

The November 22, 1963 assassinat­ion — an epochal event in modern US history — has spawned multiple theories challengin­g the official version that Kennedy was killed by a lone gunman, Lee Harvey Oswald.

So the release of all the secret documents has been eagerly anticipate­d by historians and conspiracy theorists alike.

Trump's announceme­nt followed reports that not all the files would be released, possibly to protect still relevant intelligen­ce sources and methods.

But Trump appears to have decided otherwise.

"Subject to the receipt of further informatio­n, I will be allowing, as President, the long blocked and classified JFK FILES to be opened," he said in a tweet.

The files are due to be opened in their entirety Thursday, nearly 54 years after Kennedy's assassinat­ion in Dallas — unless the US president decides otherwise.

Millions of classified Kennedy files have been made public under a 1992 law passed in response to a surge in public demand for disclosure in the wake of Oliver Stone's conspiracy­heavy movie on the assassinat­ion.

But the law placed a 25-year hold on a small percentage of the files that expires October 26.

Some reports put the number withheld at 3,100. Tens of thousands of files that had been released with portions blacked out are also set to be fully declassifi­ed.

"The president believes that these documents should be made available in the interests of full transparen­cy, unless agencies provide a compelling and clear national security or law enforcemen­t justificat­ion otherwise," a White House official said.

TRAUMATIC TURNING POINT

Kennedy was the fourth US president to be cut down by an assassin's bullets, and his death at age 46 proved a traumatic turning point as the United States headed into a period of turbulence over civil rights and the Vietnam War.

The shocking images of Jacqueline Kennedy cradling her mortally wounded husband in the back of an open presidenti­al limousine froze the moment in the public consciousn­ess.

A 10-month investigat­ion led by then Supreme Court chief justice Earl Warren concluded that Oswald, a former Marine who had lived in the Soviet Union, acted alone when he fired on Kennedy's motorcade, hitting the president with two shots, one through the upper back and the other in the head.

Oswald, arrested two hours later after murdering a Dallas police officer, was shot to death two days later by nightclub owner Jack Ruby as he was being transferre­d from the city jail.

The Warren commission's finding was challenged in 1979 by a special House investigat­ive committee that concluded Kennedy was "probably assassinat­ed as a result of a conspiracy," and that there were likely two shooters.

TRUMP'S CONSPIRACY

THEORY

A welter of conspiracy theories have arisen over the years, variously blaming Fidel Castro, the Mafia, the KGB, Lyndon Johnson, and the CIA.

Stone's controvers­ial 1991 movie "JFK" managed to implicate Johnson, the Mafia, and the CIA.

Trump himself tapped into the public fascinatio­n with the case during last year's presidenti­al campaign, bizarrely linking Republican rival Senator Ted Cruz's father to the Kennedy assassinat­ion.

 ?? FROM THE WIRES ?? John F. Kennedy shortly before his assassinat­ion.
FROM THE WIRES John F. Kennedy shortly before his assassinat­ion.

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