President Trump just pulled back the curtain on one of the most questioned assassinations in American history. More than 10,000 pages of documents tied to the killing of Senator Robert F. Kennedy have now been declassified and released by the National Archives, following a direct order from Trump himself.
The move is part of a broader initiative by the Trump administration to restore public trust by declassifying long-buried files related to high-profile American assassinations. This time, the focus is on RFK—whose 1968 assassination has never sat right with millions of Americans, including his own family.
Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., the senator’s son, has repeatedly questioned the official narrative. He believes his father was killed by multiple gunmen, not just Sirhan Sirhan. With this massive document drop, the American public now has the opportunity to examine decades of sealed records and draw their own conclusions.
While the National Archives has not announced when or if additional Kennedy or Martin Luther King Jr. files will be released, the Trump administration has made clear: more is coming. In a time when government trust is at historic lows, Trump’s bold push for transparency marks a rare moment of accountability from the top.
The release offers a rare look at the federal government’s original investigation, alongside layers of FBI involvement and questions that have never truly been answered. For decades, the truth was buried—now it’s time to dig.
If you’d like to see the files [click here].