President Trump has fulfilled a long-standing promise to declassify all remaining documents related to the assassination of President John F. Kennedy, ordering the release of 80,000 pages of previously classified files.
These records, part of the President John F. Kennedy Assassination Records Collection, are now publicly accessible online at the National Archives (JFK Release 2025) or in person at the National Archives facility in College Park, Maryland.
What the JFK Files Reveal
Internet researchers and historians have wasted no time digging through these explosive documents, uncovering significant details that challenge the official narrative. While some of these revelations were previously suspected, the new files confirm long-standing theories and raise even more questions.
Key Findings from the Declassified JFK Files:
Lee Harvey Oswald was a “poor shot” during his target practice in the Soviet Union, contradicting the claim that he was a skilled marksman capable of carrying out the assassination alone.
Oswald was under active CIA surveillance just 59 days before JFK’s death—confirming the CIA had him on their radar.
A letter addressed to then-Senator Joe Biden accused him of being a “traitor”, signed by John F. Kennedy Jr.
FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover was desperate to shut down conspiracy theories just hours after Jack Ruby shot Oswald, urgently calling for a swift public report.
The CIA had a secret global network of 34 classified field bases across Africa, Europe, Asia, and Latin America—suggesting a far-reaching intelligence operation.
And much more. Just take a look:
A Cover-Up Confirmed?
These documents suggest that powerful forces inside the CIA, FBI, and Soviet intelligence had prior knowledge of the event—or worse, may have been involved. With this release, President Trump has blown the lid off decades of deception, exposing a sinister web of secrecy that Americans have long suspected.
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