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Trump releases some, not all, JFK assassination documents

By Ed Adamczyk and Danielle Haynes
Remaining government files on the assassination of President John F. Kennedy, shot to death in a Dallas motorcade on Nov. 22, 1963, are expected to be released Thursday by the National Archives and Records Administration. File Photo by UPI
1 of 13 | Remaining government files on the assassination of President John F. Kennedy, shot to death in a Dallas motorcade on Nov. 22, 1963, are expected to be released Thursday by the National Archives and Records Administration. File Photo by UPI | License Photo

Oct. 26 (UPI) -- The National Archives on Thursday published 2,800 previously secret documents related to the assassination of President John F. Kennedy, but President Donald Trump ordered about 30,000 others to be withheld.

Trump directed relevant federal agencies to conduct a review of the remaining unreleased documents that the CIA and FBI asked to be withheld citing national security concerns.

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"I am ordering today that the veil finally be lifted," Trump wrote in a memo announcing the delay. "At the same time, executive departments and agencies have proposed to me that certain information should continue to be redacted because of national security, law enforcement and foreign affairs concerns. I have no choice -- today -- but to accept those redactions rather than allow potentially irreversible harm to our nation's security."

Trump gave federal agencies six months to fully review the documents still being withheld to further narrow down what they believe must be kept secret.

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"The president wants to ensure there is full transparency here and is expecting the agencies to" determine what more can be released as quickly as possible, a White House official said.

ARCHIVE UPI's Pulitzer-winning eyewitness account of JFK assassination

"It should be a rare thing that information is withheld," the official said.

A National Security Council official said there will be rolling releases of information between Thursday and the deadline of April 26.

The majority of of government material regarding Kennedy's assassination had previously been released, so no bombshell exposés were expected. About 3,000 full documents and 30,000 partly redacted documents, though, were expected to be released Thursday by an act of Congress.

A National Archives and Records Administration official told reporters Thursday that all documents released Thursday would be in full, not redacted.

Kennedy was assassinated on Nov. 22, 1963, while riding in a motorcade in Dallas, Texas, during a campaign trip. As the first globally galvanizing incident of the television era, the assassination has long had a hold on public imagination.

For decades, a number of conspiracy theories have suggested that the conclusion of the government's official Warren Commission inquiry -- that Lee Harvey Oswald acted alone in killing Kennedy -- was at best, inaccurate, and at worst, a cover-up.

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ARCHIVE UPI's coverage of the assassination of John F. Kennedy

The release of the documents by the National Archives and Records Administration, however, were not expected to reveal much about the shooting that's not already known. It could, however, shed new light on ancillary issues in the historical narrative.

Relatively little has been revealed, for example, about Oswald's trip to Mexico City two months before the assassination. On the trip, he met with Cuban and Soviet representatives.

The papers released Thursday could also offer insight on the careers of longtime CIA operatives E. Howard Hunt and James McCord -- two figures who later became known for their involvement in the Watergate scandal.

At the end of its investigation, the Warren Commission ordered tens of thousands of documents related to the shooting locked away until the year 2039. A subsequent congressional investigation a decade later ordered its files in the case sealed until 2029.

In 1992, however, following the controversial and influential film JFK, Congress took action to have most of the documents immediately released to the public. Those records that remained classified continued to be guarded due to a number of reasons, such as they contained sensitive or tax information.

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Most of the information still held by the government has been classified as "not believed relevant" to the assassination investigation. Those who remain fascinated with the now 54-year-old story, though, still await Trump to approve release of the documents.

Kennedy's assassination became a watershed moment in television journalism, as well as the reporting of breaking news. United Press International, the first news organization to report the shooting, ultimately won a Pulitzer Prize for its assassination coverage.

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