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FBI finds 2,400 undisclosed JFK records after Trump’s order — media

According to the sources, the White House was notified of the newly discovered documents last Friday

WASHINGTON, February 11. /TASS/. The US Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) has discovered some 2,400 undisclosed records related to the assassination of the country’s 35th President John F. Kennedy, which were never provided to a special board, the Axios news website reported, citing sources.

"The still-secret records are contained in 14,000 pages of documents the FBI found in a review triggered by [US] President [Donald] Trump's January 23 executive order demanding the release of all JFK assassination records," the report reads.

According to the sources, the White House was notified of the newly discovered documents last Friday. The contents of the records are closely held classified secrets. Axios notes that the three sources who provided information about the documents said they hadn't seen them.

On January 23, US President Donald Trump signed an executive order on the declassification of records concerning the assassinations of President John F. Kennedy, Senator Robert F. Kennedy, and Nobel Peace Prize winner Reverend Martin Luther King Jr.

John F. Kennedy, the 35th president of the United States, was killed in Dallas during a campaign trip to Texas on November 22, 1963. The board formed to look into the crime came to the conclusion that the murder was the work of Lee Harvey Oswald, who acted alone, and was not part of a major conspiracy. According to the commission, the shots were fired from the sixth floor of a building housing a school book depository in the city’s central square. This is where a scoped rifle and spent brass were found.

The US National Archives and Records Administration has so far declassified 99% of about five million pages of records related to the JFK assassination. According to US media outlets, some 4,000 documents remain classified.