Dayton Daily News

Biden delays release of remaining JFK assassinat­ion records, citing pandemic

- Vimal Patel

The pandemic has created backlogs for multiple federal agencies, resulting in pileups of visa applicatio­ns, unprocesse­d Social Security benefits and backlogs in Food and Drug Administra­tion inspection­s.

On Friday, the White House announced another administra­tive casualty: a delay in the release of a trove of records related to the assassinat­ion of former President John F. Kennedy.

The White House statement, signed by President Joe Biden, did not make clear exactly how the coronaviru­s had delayed the release of the records, which must be released to comply with a 1992 congressio­nal act, but said that the national archivist had reported that the pandemic had had a “significan­t impact on the agencies” that need to be consulted on redactions.

The archivist of the United States directs the National Archives and Records Administra­tion, the repository of public government­al records. The position has been held since 2009 by David S. Ferriero, a former librarian at the Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology, Duke University and the New York Public Library. He is the 10th person in the role since the National Archives were establishe­d in 1934.

The White House statement said that the National

Archives required additional time to conduct research and work with the agencies, which include the Defense, Justice and State department­s.

The assassinat­ion of the 35th president, on Nov. 22, 1963, still holds a grip on the public imaginatio­n. It has also been the subject of an endless stream of conspiracy theories.

Despite an exhaustive, yearlong inquiry into the murder led by Chief Justice Earl Warren that concluded that Lee Harvey Oswald acted alone, surveys over the years have consistent­ly found that most Americans believe others were involved.

The 1992 law required the government to make public the last of the Kennedy assassinat­ion documents by Oct. 26, 2017, unless the sitting

president opted to withhold any for national security reasons. The administra­tion of President Donald Trump did release a trove of JFK assassinat­ion records in the fall of that year. While the documents have been intriguing to researcher­s and conspiracy theorists alike, they have not conclusive­ly changed the previous understand­ing of the assassinat­ion.

Trump, who himself has dabbled in an assassinat­ion conspiracy, claiming that the father of onetime rival Ted Cruz was somehow involved in Kennedy’s murder, pushed back the release date of some records to 2021.

In the White House statement Friday, Biden said he agreed with the archivist’s recommenda­tion that records be withheld from public disclosure

until December 2022.

“Temporary continued postponeme­nt,” he said, “is necessary to protect against identifiab­le harm to the military defense, intelligen­ce operations, law enforcemen­t or the conduct of foreign relations that is of such gravity that it outweighs the public interest in immediate disclosure.”

The White House also said it wanted to make the JFK documents more accessible. More than 250,000 records — more than 90% of the records agency’s collection on the assassinat­ion — have been publicly released and “only a small fraction” contain redactions. But many of the records are available only to the public if they travel to the National Archives site in College Park, Maryland.

 ?? GEORGE TAMES / THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? People in Washington react to the assassinat­ion of former President John F. Kennedy in Washington, Nov. 22, 1963. On Friday, the White House announced another administra­tive casualty: a delay in the release of a trove of records related to the assassinat­ion of former President John F. Kennedy.
GEORGE TAMES / THE NEW YORK TIMES People in Washington react to the assassinat­ion of former President John F. Kennedy in Washington, Nov. 22, 1963. On Friday, the White House announced another administra­tive casualty: a delay in the release of a trove of records related to the assassinat­ion of former President John F. Kennedy.

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