
MLK assassination files released: What to know
James Earl Ray, who died in prison in 1998, admitted to the murder after he was captured in London, but conspiracy theories have swirled about the motivation behind the attack and who may have been involved beyond Ray, including the federal government.
Why now?
Trump signed an executive order in January to release of the documents related to MLK's assassination.
While campaigning for a second non-consecutive term last year, the president had promised to release FBI records related to the deaths of high-profile figures in the 1960s, including President John F. Kennedy Jr. (JFK) and former Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy Jr. (RFK).
The documents related to the Kennedy brothers have also been released, prompting increased speculation about the high-profile assassinations.
The president also signaled he would release the files related to convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, but the administration said earlier this month that it had no additional information to provide and has sought a court release of grand jury testimony.
What are the documents?
The previously classified records related to MLK's assassination while he was standing on the balcony of the Lorraine Motel in Memphis include details about the FBI's probe into the civil rights leader before his death five decades ago.
King was in Tennessee to support sanitation workers who were on strike over low pay, and he had delivered his 'I've been to the mountaintop' speech there the night before.
Then-FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover deemed King a radical and targeted him for investigation with the agency's Counter Intelligence Program (COINTELPRO).
Records have shown that the FBI had wiretaps on King's phone lines, surveilled his hotel rooms and used informants to build information against him while he led the 1960s Civil Rights effort against discrimination.
What do they reveal?
More than 230,000 pages of documents related to King's assassination were published in Monday's release. According to the National Archives, more files will be released as information is reviewed.
The documents unveiled, so far, focus primarily on the FBI's investigation into King's death, such as agency memos and interviews with people who knew Ray, but they also provide insight into the FBI's investigation into King's anti-poverty and anti-war campaign before his death.
Historians who have studied King told The New York Times that the documents provide little new information, though.
How does the King family feel about this?
His family has long questioned the conventional narrative that Ray, who pleaded guilty to the assassination and died in 1998 a Nashville, Tenn., prison at age 70, acted alone in the shooting death of King.
A jury in a 1999 civil trial found that a man, who claimed to have known about a plot to kill King, and unnamed others — including government agencies — had participated in a conspiracy to carry out the killing.
However, the Justice Department reopened the case in the 1990s and said it 'found nothing to disturb the 1969 judicial determination that James Earl Ray murdered Dr. King.'
King's two living children, Martin Luther King III and Bernice A. King, released a joint statement on Monday saying that they disagreed with the Trump administration's release of the documents on their father without appropriate context.
'We recognize that the release of documents concerning the assassination of our father, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., has long been a subject of interest, captivating public curiosity for decades,' the duo wrote. '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 urged people to view the files 'within their full historical context.'
'During our father's lifetime, he was relentlessly targeted by an invasive, predatory, and deeply disturbing disinformation and surveillance campaign orchestrated by J. Edgar Hoover through the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI),' the Kings continued. 'The intent of the government's COINTELPRO campaign was not only to monitor, but to discredit, dismantle, and destroy Dr. King's reputation and the broader American Civil Rights Movement.'
'These actions were not only invasions of privacy, but intentional assaults on the truth – undermining the dignity and freedoms of private citizens who fought for justice, designed to neutralize those who dared to challenge the status quo,' they added.
The King family won a wrongful death lawsuit against Shelby County, Tenn., in 1999.
'The jury unanimously concluded that our father was the victim of a conspiracy … including government agencies as a part of a wider scheme,' the King children said in their statement. 'As we review these newly released files, we will assess whether they offer additional insights beyond the findings our family has already accepted.'
The two also noted their support for 'transparency and historical accountability,' but warned against efforts to smear their father's legacy that may come from the release.
'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,' they wrote. 'Let us move forward together, inspired by our father's enduring vision of the Beloved Community – a world made possible when we choose to center love in all that we do.'
They added, 'By embracing compassion, mutual respect, and justice, we can transform his dream into our shared reality.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Miami Herald
an hour ago
- Miami Herald
With millions at stake, Sergio Pino's wife reaches key settlement in estate case
Just over a year ago, wealthy Coral Gables developer Sergio Pino fatally shot himself at his waterfront home in Cocoplum as FBI agents closed in to arrest him on charges of plotting to kill his wife, Tatiana, with whom he'd been going through a bitter divorce. The day after Pino, 67, died on July 16, 2024, his brother filed an estate case in the probate division of the Miami-Dade Circuit Court — a legal move that set the stage for a dramatic conflict over hundreds of millions of dollars in assets. The dispute has pitted Tatiana against the brother-in-law, Carlos Pino, and top executives of the late developer's company, Century Homebuilders Group. READ MORE: Miami developer Sergio Pino found dead amid FBI 'murder for hire' investigation In mid-July, Tatiana, 56, fortified her position in the estate case and dozens of related lawsuits when she reached a key settlement agreement with her two grown daughters from her marriage with Pino as well as with the two adult children from Pino's prior marriage, according to her lawyers Glen Waldman and Ray Rafool. The agreement was negotiated as six of nine defendants in the FBI's murder-for-hire probe targeting Pino pleaded guilty to conspiracy and related charges in Miami federal court. A trial is scheduled for October. The recent settlement, which is expected to be approved by Probate Judge Yvonne Colodny, says that Tatiana is entitled to full ownership of Century Homebuilders, the biggest of the couple's martial assets, with two dozen residential developments across Florida. 'It's critically important,' Waldman told the Miami Herald Wednesday. 'I'm very happy we got this done.' The settlement reinforces an operating agreement set up by Pino in 2013 when he founded Coral Gables-based Century Homebuilders and listed himself as owning half of the company and his wife the other half, the lawyers said. When he died last year, his ownership half automatically transferred to Tatiana under the terms of the agreement, they said. She is Century Homebuilder's president, according to the company's website. But just because Tatiana and Pino's four adult children stand 'united' on her full ownership of Century Homebuilders — along with the allocation of other assets listed in the settlement agreement — it doesn't mean the legal disputes between Pino's wife and several others with estate claims will be easily resolved. The reason: In the months and days before Pino killed himself, he arranged to transfer his half ownership of Century Homebuilders to a newly created trust benefiting the company's longtime chief operating officer, Pedro Hernandez, and a few other senior employees. Pino carried out this change despite a Miami-Dade judge's order in the couple's long-running divorce case that prohibited him from disposing of their marital assets. Tatiana's divorce petition, filed in 2022, was not finalized before Pino's death last summer. As a result, the curator of Pino's estate, Coral Gables accountant Philip Schechter, took the position that half of Century Homebuilders was an estate asset and potentially subject to a claim by Hernandez that he and the other employees should be allowed to receive Pino's equity in the company. At minimum, the wife should get the other half. But Waldman, Tatiana's probate lawyer, said that as the curator, Schecter is 'standing in the shoes of Pino on behalf of his four grown children.' And now that they agree with Pino's wife, Tatiana, that she should be entitled to full ownership of Century Homebuilders, Hernandez's ownership claim rings hollow. Ultimately, a resolution to the central conflict in Pino's estate case might be negotiated by a court-appointed mediator, lawyer Bruce Greer. Then, Colodny, the probate judge, would have final say. Century Homebuilders has been run by Tatiana and her two daughters almost since Pino's death. Attorney Luis Barreto, who represents Hernandez and other Century Homebuilders employees, declined to comment, noting that he's 'in the middle of settlement discussions.' Hernandez, formerly second in command at Century, is no longer working for the company. In the family's settlement, dated July 17, Tatiana's two daughters, Carolina Pino Neuman and Allesandra Pino, and Pino's two grown children from a prior marriage, Jacqueline Pino Wechsler and Sergio Alexander Pino, agreed to terms not only on her ownership of Century Homebuilders but on other major real estate assets in Miami, Doral and South Miami. Among the company's assets: 850 Living, an eight-story, multi-family project with 230 units at 811 NW 43rd Ave., was sold for $71.5 million in March. Under the settlement, Tatiana and the four children agreed that Jacqueline Pino Wechsler shall receive half of the net proceeds from the 850 Living property sale, according to a profit-sharing agreement set up by Pino a decade ago. Tatiana Pino shall receive a quarter of the proceeds, and another quarter shall go in equal parts to Pino's four grown children. Miami attorney Mark Raymond, who is advising the Pino estate's curator, Schecter, said the settlement between Tatiana and Pino's four grown children was a step in the right direction, reducing the amount of litigation and costs. 'This is a positive development,' Raymond said. 'It will expedite the administration of the estate to the benefit of all beneficiaries and creditors.' Attorney Sergio Mendez, who represents Pino's brother Carlos, who filed the estate case, did not respond to a request for comment. In addition to the family's settlement, Tatiana has filed dozens of claims against Pino's estate, including one seeking $30 million in damages based on FBI allegations that her late husband conspired to kill her toward the end of their 32-year marriage. Her claim states that Pino, a Cuban immigrant who had built a real estate empire over decades, committed 'attempted murder, battery, and intentional infliction of emotional distress by slowly poisoning Ms. Pino with fentanyl and hiring hitmen squads, who followed Ms. Pino for days, and then brandished a firearm at Ms. Pino and her daughter.' The claim, which attaches federal charging documents filed against his nine co-conspirators, states that the developer 'caused Ms. Pino to be hospitalized on various occasions and suffer serious physical injury and emotional distress.'
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Country singer Alexis Wilkins laughs off claims she's a 'Mossad honeypot.'
Country artist Alexis Wilkins says she's had enough of the 'insanely ridiculous' conspiracy theories swirling around her romantic relationship with new FBI Director Kash Patel. In a wide-ranging interview on Megyn Kelly's show, the 26-year-old dismissed MAGA chatter that she is a secret Israeli agent planted to compromise Trumpworld via the 45-year-old Trump ally. 'It would have been a really long-game play,' she joked, noting she began dating Patel 'a little over two and a half years ago—so, long before he was the head of the FBI.'


New York Post
2 hours ago
- New York Post
Hillary Clinton approved plan hatched by campaign aides to ‘smear' Trump with Russia collusion: declassified docs
WASHINGTON — Hillary Clinton approved a plan hatched by a campaign adviser to 'smear' then-candidate Donald Trump with false claims of Russian collusion and distract from her own mounting emails scandal during the 2016 election, according to explosive intelligence files declassified Thursday. The plan included 'raising the theme of 'Putin's support for Trump'' and 'subsequently steering public opinion toward the notion that it needs to equate' the Russian leader's political influence campaign with actual interference in election infrastructure. 3 Hillary Clinton approved a plan to 'smear' Trump with Russia collusion, according to declassified docs. Getty Images Advertisement 3 Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard speaks with reporters in the James Brady Press Briefing Room at the White House, Wednesday, July 23, 2025, in Washington. AP 'Clinton approved a plan proposed by one of her foreign policy advisors, Julianne Smith, to 'smear Donald Trump by magnifying the scandal tied to the intrusion by the Russian special services in the pre-election process to benefit the Republican candidate,'' one of the declassified memos read. Special counsel John Durham uncovered the information during a multi-year probe into intelligence activities during the 2016 election. Advertisement Attorney General Pam Bondi, FBI Director Kash Patel and other members of the US Intelligence Community declassified the files from Durham's probe at the request of Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa.). 'Based on the Durham annex, the Obama FBI failed to adequately review and investigate intelligence reports showing the Clinton campaign may have been ginning up the fake Trump-Russia narrative for Clinton's political gain, which was ultimately done through the Steele Dossier and other means,' Grassley said in a statement. 'These intelligence reports and related records, whether true or false, were buried for years. History will show that the Obama and Biden administration's law enforcement and intelligence agencies were weaponized against President Trump,' he added. 3 AP Advertisement 'This political weaponization has caused critical damage to our institutions and is one of the biggest political scandals and cover-ups in American history. The new Trump administration has a tremendous responsibility to the American people to fix the damage done and do so with maximum speed and transparency.' The Post reached out to reps for Clinton and Smith for comment.