The Trump administration released tens of thousands of pages of previously withheld government documents on the assassination of President John F. Kennedy, providing new details on the historic event.
Back up: Kennedy was assassinated when his motorcade drove through Dallas, Texas, on November 22, 1963.
The details: The U.S. National Archives released more than 63,000 pages of previously classified files to the public in accordance with an executive order signed by President Donald Trump in January. Here are some of the high-profile takeaways.
- One document reveals how Gary Underhill, who worked for the CIA, was found dead shortly after telling friends that “a small clique within the CIA” was responsible for the assassination.
- The CIA closely monitored Oswald’s travels to Mexico City, where he sought a visa to return to the Soviet Union just two months before JFK’s death.
- One document links a CIA-affiliated arms dealer to the sporting goods store where Oswald allegedly purchased his rifle.
- Oswald’s phone calls were intercepted, and CIA officials urged Washington to keep those wiretaps secret even decades later.
- A memo from historian and JFK aide Arthur Schlesinger Jr. warned the president about the CIA’s influence over foreign policy, calling it a “state within a state.”
- The CIA bugged a meeting Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy was likely to attend with two Cuban exiles. CIA bugging the AG…
Zoom out: Some of these documents had been previously released—but with heavy redactions. This batch was unredacted.
Real talk from G: There are more excerpts from the files that have made their rounds on social media but require more diligence from yours truly to verify. If they pan out, I’ll be sure to share them with you all.
The last word goes to Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard, who wrote on X: “President Trump is ushering in a new era of maximum transparency… Promises made, promises kept.”