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Demonstrator with sign saying "Let his death not be in vain", in front of the White House, after the assassination of Martin Luther King. For some, King's assassination meant the end of the strategy of nonviolence. [32] Others in the movement reaffirmed the need to carry on King's and the movement's work.
Pages in category "Assassination of Martin Luther King Jr." The following 23 pages are in this category, out of 23 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
The Jan. 23 executive order gives intelligence officials two weeks to come up with a plan to make the remaining JFK assassination files available to the public, and 45 days for the RFK and MLK ...
To conduct a "full and complete investigation of the circumstances surrounding the deaths of President John F. Kennedy and Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr." [6] Subcommittees; Subcommittee on the Assassination of Martin Luther King, Jr.; Chaired by Walter E. Fauntroy ; Subcommittee on the Assassination of John F. Kennedy; Chaired by Richardson Preyer
The announcement was the fulfillment of a Trump campaign promise, giving the public access to all the federal government knows about the murders of President John F. Kennedy in 1963, as well as ...
President Donald Trump signed an order to declassify and release all remaining records relating to the assassinations of President John F Kennedy, Robert F Kennedy Sr, and the Rev Dr Martin Luther ...
The 1968 New York City riot was a disturbance sparked by the assassination of Martin Luther King on April 4, 1968. Harlem, the largest African-American neighborhood in Manhattan was expected to erupt into looting and violence as it had done a year earlier, in which two dozen stores were either burglarized or burned and four people were killed.
Just two months after Dr. King’s assassination, Robert F. Kennedy was assassinated in Los Angeles while campaigning for president. Within that same decade, Malcolm X was also assassinated in 1965.