The federal government on Monday released thousands of records on the 1968 assassination of Martin Luther King Jr. — a move that was ordered by President Trump earlier this year.

The Office of the Director of National Intelligence said the documents, which number over 230,000 pages, “had never been digitized and sat collecting dust in facilities across the federal government for decades, until today.”

The records include the FBI’s “discussion of potential leads, internal FBI memos detailing the progress of the case, and documents related to James Earl Ray’s former cellmate, who stated he discussed with Ray an alleged assassination plot,” according to ODNI. The agency says the release also includes CIA records on the search for Ray, who fled the U.S. before he was eventually captured and pleaded guilty to assassinating King.

“The American people have waited nearly sixty years to see the full scope of the federal government’s investigation into Dr. King’s assassination,” Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard said in a statement.

ODNI called Monday’s release “the first time these records are published online in one collection with minimal redactions,” though it said some records had been made public previously through Freedom of Information Act requests.

ODNI said King’s relatives were “provided an opportunity to review the files” two weeks ago.

Prior to the release, some relatives of King pushed back on the plan: “For us, the assassination of our father is a deeply personal family loss that we have endured over the last 56 years. We hope to be provided the opportunity to review the files as a family prior to its public release.”

King’s two living children, Bernice King and Martin Luther King III, said in a statement Monday they understood the records have “long been a subject of interest,” but urged people to engage with the files “with empathy, restraint, and respect for our family’s continued grief.”

The statement — released by the King Center for Nonviolent Social Change — pointed to the FBI’s yearslong surveillance of King in the 1960s, which a Justice Department report later concluded was “very probably” illegal. 

“While we support transparency and historical accountability, we object to any attacks on our father’s legacy or attempts to weaponize it to spread falsehoods,” the family members said. “Those who promote the fruit of the FBI’s surveillance will unknowingly align themselves with an ongoing campaign to degrade our father and the Civil Rights Movement.”

Bernice King addressed the release of the files in a “Vanity Fair” story Monday, writing, “I wonder why I have to be confronted once again with something that was very confusing and distressing for me as a five-year-old. I am, honestly, not prepared to revisit the gruesome details of this painful history. For me, there is no real value in it; there is only reliving the trauma.” Later Monday, she wrote on X, “Now, do the Epstein files.”

King’s niece, Alveda King, said in ODNI’s statement she supported the release, calling it “a historic step towards the truth that the American people deserve.”

Shortly after returning to office, Mr. Trump ordered the government to declassify and release federal records on President John F. Kennedy’s 1963 assassination, along with the 1968 killings of King and Sen. Robert F. Kennedy. Records on JFK were released in March, and the government released several tranches of documents on RFK starting in April.

All three assassinations have drawn decades of public curiosity, including theories about whether the people accused and convicted of assassinating the three men acted alone or were even responsible for the killings.

Ray pleaded guilty to murdering King in Memphis one year after the assassination, and was sentenced to 99 years in prison, but he later recanted his guilty plea and spent years unsuccessfully seeking a new trial. He died in 1998.

Members of King’s family have contended that Ray was not the shooter. Their statement Monday pointed to a 1999 wrongful death suit in Tennessee civil court in which a jury concluded a man named Loyd Jowers and other co-conspirators, “including government agencies,” were linked to King’s assassination.

Other official findings have varied. The Justice Department conducted reviews of the assassination in 1977 and 2000, which asserted that Ray was the assassin and that he didn’t act as part of a conspiracy. In the 1970s, the House Select Committee on Assassinations found that King was likely assassinated as part of a conspiracy involving Ray, but that the government wasn’t involved.



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