Anna Paulina Luna, an ally of Trump, has made a dramatic declaration regarding the assassination of former President JFK while assuming the role of chair for a newly established task force aimed at unveiling some of the most intriguing government confidential information.
Luna has indicated that her team’s primary focus will be on declassifying highly sought-after information such as records concerning the murder of John F. Kennedy and files linked to the controversial financier Jeffrey Epstein.
Additionally, she plans to reveal details on what the U.S. government knows about UFOs, as well as shedding light on topics like the assassinations of Martin Luther King Jr. and Robert F. Kennedy, among other subjects of national importance.
Secretive documents about the origins of COVID-19 and the September 11, 2001, terrorist attack on the World Trade Centers could all soon be revealed, Luna shared.
The Florida Republican added that her investigation into JFK’s assassination will be more comprehensive than past efforts.
‘In previous investigations, they didn’t have access to the information that we are going to have access to, and so that’s a big deal, especially if you’re looking at what truly happened with JFK,’ the 35-year-old continued.
She also dropped a bombshell about her personal beliefs about JFK’s 1963 murder: ‘I believe that there were two shooters, and we should be finding more information as we are able to.’
The task force will hold its first hearing in March and it will cover the Massachusetts Democrat’s murder.
Witnesses at the hearing could include individuals who were present in the operation room where JFK passed away, Luna said.
‘There’s people that have been publicly out there, for example, in the JFK stuff that were actually present in the room, at the operating room, where he was actually brought to right after the shooting,’ the Floridian explained.
‘So we hope to bring those people in to testify. And again, these hearings will be open to the public.’
Luna and Oversight Chairman James Comer’s new task force comes on the heels of Donald Trump ordering the full release of the JFK files shortly after taking office.Â
His executive order requires the director of national intelligence and other officials to formulate a plan for the full release of the assassination files within 15 days.
Trump also ordered the release of the MLK and RFK files, requesting that the officials present him with a plan to do so within 45 days.
Luna shared that she will be working directly with the White House to reveal more about these high-profile murders.
Already Luna and Comer sent letters to the agency’s responsible for the necessary documents.
The pair sent letters to Attorney General Pam Bondi and the Department of Justice to reveal more details about the Epstein files.
They have also sent letters to the National Security Agency, CIA, the Pentagon, and the State and Energy Departments.
Furthermore, the Republican-led task force will investigate unidentified aerial phenomena and unidentified submerged objects which have captured major public interest.Â
On Monday, it was revealed by Axios that the FBI had unearthed 2,400 new documents that could shed light on the enduring mystery of JFK’s death.
These newly unearthed documents may include files on a CIA spy chief with a murky role in the affair, it has emerged.
The CIA man based in Miami funded a group of Cuban exiles, which assassin Lee Harvey Oswald tried to infiltrate weeks before he shot the president in Dallas on November 22, 1963.
According to Jefferson Morley, a leading expert on the assassination, the new documents could include files on George Joannides, who was chief of covert action at the CIA’s station in Miami in 1963.
Joannides, who died in 1990, was also case officer for a group of anti-Castro students called the the Cuban Student Directorate, which had several interactions with Oswald, and received funding from the CIA.
JFK investigators have long been intrigued by Joannides – whose codename was ‘Howard’ – and wanted to know more about him.
They also want to know more about whether elements of the CIA, in the wake of the JFK assassination, used the Cuban Student Directorate to promote propaganda and a potential U.S. invasion of Cuba.Â
A collection of over 5 million government records at the National Archives was required to be opened by 2017, unless there were any exemptions designated by the president.
But about 3,600 of those records still have redactions and haven’t yet been fully released.
As he ordered their declassification with the stroke of a pen in the Oval Office, Trump said: ‘All will be revealed.’
It has previously been speculated that hundreds of pages of documents relating to the Joannides episode may still exist. If they do, they could soon be made public by the newly minted congressional task force.Â