Trump orders to publish files about murders of John F. Kennedy, Robert F. Kennedy and Luther King Jr

President Donald Trump ordered Thursday to publicize thousands of secret government documents about the murder of President John F. Kennedy in 1963.

US President Donald Trump ordered Thursday to publicize thousands of secret government documents about the murder of President John F. Kennedy in 1963, on which there have been conspiracy theories for decades.

The executive order that Trump signed also has the objective of decoublybating the remaining federal records related to the murders of Senator Robert F. Kennedy and Reverend Martin Luther King Jr. is part of a series of decrees that Trump has quickly announced in the first week of his second term.

Speaking to journalists, the president said: “Everything will be released.”

During his campaign for re -election, Trump had promised to make public the last lots of still secret documents about the murder of President Kennedy in Dallas, who has powerfully captured people's attention for decades. Trump made a similar promise during his first mandate, but finally yielded to the appeals of the CIA and the FBI to keep some documents secret.

Trump has nominated Kennedy's nephew, Robert F. Kennedy Jr., to be the Secretary of Health in his new government. Kennedy's father, Robert F. Kennedy, was killed in 1968 while trying to obtain the Democratic presidential nomination. Kennedy Jr. has said that he is not convinced that a single armed man has been solely responsible for his uncle's murder, President Kennedy.

The order instructs the director of National Intelligence and the Secretary of Justice to develop a plan in 15 days to publicize the remaining records of John F. Kennedy, and in 45 days for the other two cases. It was not clear when records will really be published.

Trump gave an assistant the pen he used to sign the decree and ordered Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to be given to Robert F. Kennedy Jr.

Only a few thousand the millions of government records related to the murder of President Kennedy have not yet been completely declassified. And although many people who have studied what has been announced so far say that the public should not expect shocking revelations, there is still an intense interest in the details related to the murder and the events that surrounded it.

“There is always the possibility that something slides that it would be the small tip of a much larger iceberg that would be revealing,” said Larry J. Sabato, director of the Policy Center of the University of Virginia and author of the book “The Kennedy Half -Century. ”

“That is what researchers are looking for. The probabilities are that you do not find that, but it may be there, ”he added.

Kennedy was injured in death in the center of Dallas on November 22, 1963, while his caravan passed in front of the Texas School Book Deposit. Lee Harvey Oswald, the 24 -year -old murderer, had hidden on the sixth floor of that building. Two days after Kennedy was killed, the owner of a nightclub, Jack Ruby, fatally shot Oswald during a jail transfer.

The order indicates that, although no act of Congress asks for the publication of information on the murders of Robert F. Kennedy or King, making public government records “is also of public interest.”

King and Robert F. Kennedy were killed two months apart in 1968.