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John F. Kennedy Files Officially Released to the Public

 80,000 JFK assassination docs hit the public today

John F. Kennedy Files Officially Released to the Public

On March 18, 2025, the long-awaited John F. Kennedy assassination files dropped, with thousands of entries now publicly available. President Donald Trump’s January 23 executive order sparked this historic release, fulfilling a campaign pledge to declassify all remaining records. The National Archives unleashed roughly 80,000 documents at 6:00 PM PDT today, covering the November 22, 1963, Dallas killing. Posts on X buzz with reactions as historians and conspiracy buffs dive in—find the link to the files below.

A Flood of New Details Hits the Web

The release, mandated by Executive Order 14176, includes FBI and CIA reports, memos, and testimonies—some unseen for over 60 years. Posts on X highlight early finds, like a CIA payment to an anti-Castro group tied to Lee Harvey Oswald, though no bombshells upend the Warren Commission’s lone-gunman conclusion yet. Digitized and hosted at archives.gov/jfk, the files cap a decades-long push sparked by the 1992 JFK Records Act, with 99% of the collection now out after Biden’s partial drops in 2022-2023.
What’s Inside the JFK Trove?
Expect a mix of raw data—Oswald’s Mexico City trip, Soviet embassy contacts, and Mafia whispers—plus mundane logistics from the era. Posts on X note no major narrative shift, aligning with historian Kevin Boyle’s NPR take that these won’t “dramatically overturn” the story. Still, RFK Jr.’s CIA conspiracy claims fuel speculation, and the FBI’s February discovery of 2,400 new records adds intrigue. The files also touch Robert F. Kennedy and MLK assassinations, though their full release lags.

Public Reaction and Access

X lights up with chatter—some hail transparency, others cry “nothing new.” Trump touted the move at the Kennedy Center yesterday, saying, “Everything will be revealed.” The National Archives’ new webpage makes navigation easy, though 500 docs, like tax returns, stay sealed per prior exemptions. Posts on X from users like @ercampaigner
share the link: archives.gov/jfk. Dig in—this is history unfiltered.

Why Now, and What’s Next?

Trump’s order reversed years of delays by intelligence agencies, who cited national security until this final push. The release stokes debate—will it quiet conspiracies or fan them? Posts on X lean both ways, but the files’ sheer volume promises months of scrutiny. With MLK and RFK records still trickling out, this JFK drop marks a transparency milestone. Check the link below to explore yourself.

 

Link to Files: archives.gov/jfk

 

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Editor: Leon D. Crane

Editor: Leon D. Crane

Crafting compelling stories and delivering impactful content. A wordsmith by trade, a storyteller at heart. Embracing the art of journalism. #Writer #Journalism

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