Politics and Current
King Family responds after Trump’s release of murder acts as a leader in civil rights – essence
Photo of Mark Terrill-Pool/Getty Images
President Donald Trump signed an executive order On Thursday, to reject the FBI files related to the murders of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., President John F. Kennedy and former US Senator and Prosecutor General Robert F. Kennedy.
“It’s big, huh?” Trump noticed. “I know that people have been waiting for this … for decades.” He added: “Everything will be revealed.”
The king’s family revealed in a statement that they were informed in regards to the order only on the day of signing. “Today, our family learned that President Trump ordered the opposite provisions of the murders of President John F. Kennedy, his brother Robert F. Kennedy and our father, Fr. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., – said Martin Luther King III and Bernice King, the last two survivors of the Civil Rights Leaders.
“For us, our father’s murder is a deeply personal family loss that we have survived in the last 56 years,” the statement continued. “We hope that we will be able to review files as a family before public edition.”
The order requires a stage file release process. Agencies, including the Office of the National Intelligence Director and the Department of Justice, are obliged to develop plans inside 45 days to issue files related to Dr. King and Robert F. Kennedy. In the case of files regarding President Kennedy, the schedule is 15 days.
Although Congress didn’t specifically authorize the release of files about Dr. King and Robert F. Kennedy, the order cites a wider interest in transparency. “It is finally in the national interest to free all records related to these killings immediately,” says the order.
The decision to disinfect FBI files in the scope of killings by Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. And Kennedy Brothers is important. For many years, a lot of information has remained edited from a public view. Dr. King was fatally shot in 1968, standing on the balcony of the Lorraine motel in Memphis, Tennessee. His murder took place only a few years after the killing of President John F. Kennedy, who collaborated with King to advertise civil rights to Black Americans.
FBI files regarding Dr. King drew significant attention as a result of the history of the agency’s supervision under the CointelPro program, which studied King and other civil leaders. This history fueled persistent speculation in regards to the government’s involvement in his murder, despite the Congress Committee of 1979, which stated that it didn’t find evidence impliving federal, state or local agencies.