Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The President John F. Kennedy Assassination Records Collection Act of 1992, or the JFK Records Act, is a public law passed by the United States Congress, effective October 26, 1992. [1] It directed the National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) to establish a collection of records to be known as the President John F. Kennedy ...
James Earl Files (born January 24, 1942), also known as James Sutton, [a] is an American former prisoner. In 1994, while serving a 50-year sentence for the 1991 attempted murders of two police officers, Files gave interviews stating that he was the " grassy knoll shooter" in the 1963 assassination of United States President John F. Kennedy .
About 3,500 documents remain unpublished or published with partial redactions, according to one expert.
The United States House of Representatives Select Committee on Assassinations (HSCA) was established on September 15, 1976 by U.S. House Resolution 1540 [7] to investigate the assassinations of John F. Kennedy and Martin Luther King Jr. in 1963 and 1968, respectively.
President Joe Biden’s administration released more than 13,000 records of President John F. Kennedy's assassination Thursday, but it fell short of fully complying with the spirit of a 30-year ...
What really happened in Dallas, Texas, the day John F. Kennedy was killed? Many think the answers are in a trove of records the CIA and other agencies have kept secret. New York Attorney Larry ...
A new survey shows more than 70% of Americans want the final trove of John F. Kennedy assassination files to be released. The poll, conducted by Bendixen & Amandi International, came a week before ...
According to a National Security Archive Report, "Much of the work of securing release of the records was done by the John F. Kennedy Assassinations Records Board in the 1990s, and the documents were located at the National Archives and Records Administration at College Park, Maryland; or at the Gerald R. Ford Library in Ann Arbor, Michigan." [11]