DOWNLOAD JFK FILES MARCH 19TH 2025 RELEASE
Alright, so here’s the deal with the JFK files in 2025. As of today, March 19, 2025, there’s been some big movement on this. Back in January, President Trump signed an executive order pushing for the full declassification of all records related to John F. Kennedy’s assassination in 1963. He didn’t stop there—he also included the assassinations of Robert F. Kennedy and Martin Luther King Jr., which has people buzzing. The idea was to get everything out in the open, no more secrets, after decades of speculation and conspiracy theories.
Fast forward to this week—yesterday, March 18, the National Archives dropped 1,123 documents. That’s the latest batch, and it’s tied to Trump’s order from Monday, March 17, where he basically said, “Let it all out.” People are digging through these PDFs right now, trying to figure out if there’s anything juicy. From what I’ve heard, most of these docs are pretty short, like under 10 pages each, and they’re not exactly organized in a way that makes it easy to connect the dots. Some folks, like historians and journalists, are saying it’s mostly stuff the CIA held back to protect their old intel methods—not some smoking gun proving a grand conspiracy.
Before this, the FBI found about 2,400 new records in February that they didn’t even know were part of the JFK case until Trump’s order made them dig deeper. Those are getting shuffled over to the Archives too. So, between that and this week’s release, there’s a lot of paper floating around. The catch? It’s not clear if this is everything. The Archives said they’ll keep posting more as they digitize, but no one’s sure if we’ve hit the bottom of the pile yet.
What’s in them? Well, early takes—like from the New York Times—say there’s some redactions still, despite Trump promising none. Experts like Tim Naftali, a professor who’s been at this stuff for years, think it’s more about the CIA covering its tracks than revealing a big plot. But people are still hopeful—or skeptical, depending on who you ask—that something wild might pop up. Conspiracy folks are probably not going to be satisfied either way.