
Trump Administration Live Updates: U.S. Pulls Out of UNESCO Again
But several noted King historians said they had found little in the way of new revelations about the death of the civil rights leader in the documents, and noted that the trove does not include F.B.I. wiretap recordings of Dr. King and other materials that remain under court seal until 2027.
The release on Monday, with no prior notice, came at a time when Mr. Trump and White House officials have sought to divert attention from right-wing backlash demanding the release of files related to the death of the disgraced financier Jeffrey Epstein.
Trump administration officials said the King assassination documents include notes on the leads pursued by investigators, interviews with people who knew his killer, James Earl Ray, and previously unreleased details of interactions with foreign intelligence services during the manhunt for Mr. Ray.
A lone audio file released on Monday includes part of a law enforcement interview with Jerry Ray, one of James Earl Ray's siblings. In a statement, officials said the published documents had 'never been digitized and sat collecting dust in facilities across the federal government for decades.'
Many of the pages have been rendered almost illegible by time and the digitizing process. There were random and wide-ranging accounts of the investigation and manhunt, including hundreds of news clippings, tips from the public, accounts of Mr. Ray's forays into dance classes and locksmith school, and his fondness for aliases drawn from James Bond novels.
David Garrow, the author of a Pulitzer Prize-winning King biography as well as a book about the F.B.I.'s spying campaign on him, said his initial review led him to conclude that there was little of public interest in the files, much of which had already been disclosed. 'I saw nothing that struck me as new,' he said.
In 2019, Mr. Garrow published an article that recounted claims he had found in F.B.I. documents released in relation to the assassination of John F. Kennedy. Those claims include accounts of Dr. King witnessing an alleged rape in 1964 in a Washington hotel room where he had been staying.
It is unclear from the documents, which does not appear to be included in the current tranche, who is making those claims. Mr. Garrow was criticized by some historians for elevating incendiary assertions that were part of an F.B.I. smear campaign, without corroborating evidence.
The F.B.I. wiretaps and other surveillance were part of an effort to uncover damaging material on Dr. King, which the agency hoped to leverage in its campaign to derail the civil rights movement. Tapes and transcripts from that surveillance are part of what remains under seal, though summaries and other related material had been released previously. A federal judge last month denied a Justice Department request to unseal the surveillance records two years early.
Dr. King had a well-documented history of extramarital relationships. Still, some experts and Dr. King's family have expressed doubts about the veracity of some of the contents of those previously released documents, particularly when it comes to the more provocative claims about aspects of Dr. King's romantic and sexual life.
Those details, they said, could be more reflective of official efforts to undermine the civil rights leader's reputation than of reality.
'You've got to read this carefully and don't take it at face value,' said Larry J. Sabato, the director of the Center for Politics at the University of Virginia, who was reviewing the new documents on Monday with his own team of researchers.
'I'm skeptical of anything I read from F.B.I. files about M.L.K.,' he said, adding that he suspected that agents inflated or manufactured material to please J. Edgar Hoover, the agency's longtime director. 'He wanted dirt on M.LK. and his movements and his associates.'
Dr. King's surviving children, Martin III and Bernice, argued in a statement on Monday that their father had been 'relentlessly targeted by an invasive, predatory, and deeply disturbing disinformation and surveillance campaign.' The children beseeched researchers and the general public to view all of the material from the government's files in the context of their father's contributions to American society.
'We ask those who engage with the release of these files to do so with empathy, restraint and respect for our family's continuing grief,' they said. Trump administration officials have been in contact with Dr. King's family, but it remains unclear if his relatives were given the right to request redactions of the newly released material.
In a news release announcing the document upload, the administration quoted Alveda King, Dr. King's niece and a high-profile supporter of Mr. Trump, who praised the government for providing transparency. 'The declassification and release of these documents are a historic step towards the truth that the American people deserve,' she said.
As a candidate last year, Mr. Trump vowed to release files related to President Kennedy's 1963 assassination, and the 1968 murders of Robert F. Kennedy and Dr. King. The Kennedy documents, released in March, contained little new information about the assassination itself.
Talya Minsberg and Campbell Robertson contributed reporting. Research was contributed by Mitch Smith , Nicholas Bogel-Burroughs , Eduardo Medina , Audra D. S. Burch , Tim Arango , Kurt Streeter , Pooja Salhotra , Livia Albeck-Ripka and Daniel Victor .
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