Congress passed a law in 1992 requiring the documents surrounding President Kennedy's assassination to be released by 2017, but the release has been held up by national security concerns.
not Franklin Roosevelt and his retinue of New Dealers or John Kennedy and his flair for illustrious panache, but another, less successful figure, Adlai Stevenson. Who is this man? Now, his name is ...
President Trump told security agencies to develop plans to make public all documents related to the assassinations of John F. Kennedy, Robert F. Kennedy and the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.
Mackenzie Stevenson, 21, has lived in a St. John's public housing unit since she was four years old. Now, she says the city is evicting her by Jan. 31 because her mother, the lease owner ...
The decommissioned aircraft carrier John F. Kennedy embarked on its final journey to be dismantled earlier this week. The Kennedy was moored at the Navy's Inactive Ships Maintenance Facility in ...
Stevenson School senior Michelle Henaku has received a full-ride scholarship to Columbia University through the QuestBridge National College Match Scholarship. Henaku is among 2,627 students who ...
More than 3,000 people filled the auditorium at Pocatello High School as the Democratic senator from Massachusetts stood at the podium to address the crowd. It was Sept. 6, 1960. The Gate City was one of many stops for John F.
When President Donald Trump announced an executive order Thursday to release the remaining government files in three of the country’s most notorious assassinations, it immediately grabbed public attention and raised intrigue.
A famed doctor who investigated the 1963 assassination of President John F. Kennedy discussed what the upcoming release of the assassination files may reveal.
On November 22, 1963, Lee Harvey Oswald, a former U.S. Marine and defector to the Soviet Union, fired three shots from a sixth-floor window of the Texas School Book Depository, striking President Kennedy as his motorcade passed through Dealey Plaza in Dallas.
Experts who've spent decades studying the assassination of President John F. Kennedy told ABC News Friday they are hopeful that President Donald Trump will see to the disclosure of government documents on the killing that have been withheld from the public.
Trump's order is aimed at releasing documents related to the assassinations of the former president, presidential candidate and civil rights leader.