Following a significant battle claim Trump made throughout the 2024 presidential poll, President Donald Trump’s administration released about 80, 000 pages of documents pertaining to previous president John F. Kennedy’s death on Tuesday.
According to Fox News, the National Archive’s site had roughly 80, 000 pages of information on Kennedy’s death as of Tuesday evening, including more than 1, 123 unredacted files.
Trump said,” While we’re around, I thought it would be appropriate, we are later announcing and giving all of the Kennedy data,” during a visit to the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts on Monday.
The director of national intelligence Tulsi Gabbard and another administration officials were given directions by the 47th president to launch the Kennedy data on Tuesday. Trump cited the fact that the secret death records have been “wary for decades.”
You can read a bit, according to Trump. I don’t think we’ll redact everything, I think. Just don’t redact, you didn’t redact, I said. ‘”  ,
The president continued,” I promised during the plan that I would do it, and I’m a person of my word, but soon you have the JFK documents.”
Gabbard made reference to the president’s pledge to “rebuild the trust of the American people in the Intelligence Community ( IC ) and federal agencies” in a press release released on Tuesday. She explained that releasing classified information about the killings of past presidents John F. Kennedy, former senator Robert F. Kennedy, and Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., was a part of Trump’s commitment to clarity.
GOP lawmaker: JFK assassination documents to be made public on fresh website
The Kennedy data will be accessible through the National Archives ‘ web or in person at the National Archives, according to Gabbard in Tuesday’s media transfer. According to Gambard, the Trump administration’s report release contains around 80 000 webpages of “previously classified information that will be published without redactions.”
Additionally, Gabbard made it a requirement to release any additional records and documents that have been “withheld under court cover or for grand jury confidentiality.” The documents may become “immediately released,” according to the director of national intelligence, following court approval.
President Trump is ushering in a new period of maximum clarity, Gabbard wrote in a blog on X, previously Online. No redactions are being made available to the public today, in his opinion, as formerly redacted JFK Assassination Files. Promises made, promises kept.