Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard announced on Thursday that new information have emerged regarding the upcoming release of data regarding the executions of Robert F. Kennedy and Martin Luther King Jr.
Gabbard revealed that her team is currently digitizing the RFK and King information at a White House cabinet meet. More than 100 individuals have been frantically scanning the document for Martin Luther King Jr., RFK, and other assassinations, according to her. These have been in storage and containers for decades, Gabbard continued. They have not previously been scanned or seen. Within the next few weeks, we’ll include those ready to be released below.
The action comes in response to President Donald Trump‘s executive order, which mandates the unverified publication of these records, along with copies of the assassination documents from President John F. Kennedy.
The launch of the ultimate documents from President Kennedy’s death in November 1963 was earlier this month by the National Archives.
The National Archives had retained many files at the demand of both the Central Intelligence Agency and the Federal Bureau of Investigation despite disclosing millions of pages about President Kennedy’s execution over the past ten years.
According to the findings of the Warren Commission, Lee Harvey Oswald, a previous US Marine shooter, was able to kill the 46-year-old leader on his own.
The official results have no squelched any doubts about other theories relating to Kennedy’s death in Dallas, Texas, with the gradual release of new documents adding to the rumor mill.
During his Democrat political campaign in California in June 1968, Sirhan Sirhan, a Palestinian-Jordanian man, killed Robert F. Kennedy, the mayor’s younger sibling.
In Memphis, Tennessee, in April 1968, King’s career came to an end. James Earl Ray received a 99-year jail sentence after making an admission to killing King. He passed away while he was serving his sentence in 1998.
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