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Trump says he will publish 80,000 pages of JFK files on Tuesday | Donald Trump News

According to the US President, “Read a lot” files contain the assassination attempt that has fueled conspiracy theories for decades.

The President of the United States, Donald Trump, said his government will publish around 80,000 pages on Tuesday with files on the murder of John F Kennedy, whose murder heated the conspiracy theories for more than six decades.

Trump in the Kennedy Center said on Monday and said the press release “read a lot” about the murder of the 35th US president, which was killed in Dallas, Texas on November 22, 1963.

“I don't think we will reduce something. I said, “just don't reduce, you can't reduce,” said Trump to reporters. “But we will publish the JFK files.”

When asked whether he had seen what was in the files, Trump said that he was aware of her content.

“It will be very interesting,” he said.

Trump's statements are followed by an implementation regulation in January, in which all remaining records for the JFK attack and files in connection with the attacks by Robert F. Kennedy and the civil rights -icon Martin Luther King Jr.

After the order, Trump instructed the director of the National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard to present a plan for the “complete and complete publication” of files on the JFK attack within 15 days.

Last month, the FBI said that the search that was done to keep the order had appeared about 2,400 new files in connection with the assassination attempt.

The circumstances of the death of JFK have had the US company of the US company in the US company in the situation of describing the majority of Americans for decades.

In a survey of 2023 Gallup, 65 percent of the Americans stated that the Warren Commission was determined that Lee Harvey Oswald, a US Marine who was arrested for JFK's death, acted solely when killing the President.

Twenty percent of the respondents stated that Oswald had conspired with the US government, while 16 percent of the view was that he had worked with the CIA.

During his first administration, Trump promised to disclose all outstanding records about the assassination attempt, but ultimately only published about 2,800 documents after the CIA and the FBI have applied for the upstanding review.

The administration of the former US President Joe Biden published around 17,000 more records and partially or completely left less than 4,700 files.

According to the national archives, the authorities have published more than 99 percent of the approximately 320,000 documents that were checked as part of the 1992 JFK Records Act.

The law commissioned the disclosure of all remaining files by October 26, 2017, unless the president found that his release of national defense, secret services, law enforcement or the foreign relationships of gravity would cause “identifiable damage” that “the public interest in disclosure”.