Journalist Who Covered JFK Assassination Skeptical About New Declassified Documents

© AP Photo / William J. SmithIn this April 30, 1963 file photo, President John F. Kennedy listens while Grand Duchess Charlotte of Luxembourg speaks outside the White House in Washington.
In this April 30, 1963 file photo, President John F. Kennedy listens while Grand Duchess Charlotte of Luxembourg speaks outside the White House in Washington. - Sputnik Africa, 1920, 18.03.2025
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NEW YORK (RIA Novosti) - Former Associated Press journalist Peggy Simpson, who covered the assassination of 35th US President John F. Kennedy, told RIA Novosti that she was skeptical about the announced publication of new documents on the case, noting that previously released materials did not contain much valuable information.
By law, US authorities were required to fully declassify information about Kennedy's assassination by 2017, but both US President Donald Trump and interim President Joe Biden gave intelligence a reprieve to assess whether the release of information could harm US interests and international relations. The few documents released then did not cause a sensation.
Shortly after the start of his second presidential term, Trump decided to release documents again, issuing a corresponding executive order and later announcing that the data would be made public on March 18. According to the US leader, these will be "about 80,000 pages" that will not be edited.
Among those in Dallas, Texas, on that fateful November day more than 60 years ago was Peggy Simpson.
"It could be there's something in the new stuff that's going to be released, but I would, I'd be skeptical," she told RIA Novosti, commenting on the information about the upcoming publication of new documents on the case.
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Simpson also suggested that there could be many duplicates among the documents that would be published. The materials that were declassified earlier did not give the public the long-awaited answers, she recalled.
"I don't know what's in them. I haven't focused on any of what's still missing. I think that the files that have been released so far, of stuff from that era, didn't show very much, and people were very disappointed and upset," the former correspondent noted.
Simpson also drew attention to the lack of evidence of possible ties between Lee Harvey Oswald, who is believed to have killed Kennedy, and the Russians and Cubans.
"Nobody has ever proven anything," she emphasized.
Answering the question of why, in her opinion, the documents about Kennedy's assassination would still be published decades later, Simpson suggested that Trump wanted to remain in the spotlight.
"I'm sure that Trump wants to stay in the spotlight for anything and everything. So if he can get a little more spotlight on him tomorrow, then, you know, that'll suit him just fine," she added.
Kennedy was shot in Dallas, Texas, on November 22, 1963, after serving as president for less than three years. The investigation established that the murder had been committed by Lee Harvey Oswald, acting alone. Oswald was shot two days after his arrest. It turned out that in 1959-1960 Oswald lived in the Soviet Union and even worked as a turner at a plant in Minsk, married a Russian girl, who then left with him for the United States. Numerous theories arose about who might have benefited from Kennedy's murder.
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