Sensitive personal information, including social security numbers, has been unveiled in assassination documents John F. Kennedy newly unwaped published this week, and it is not well seated with affected people.
Joseph Digenova, a former campaign lawyer for US President Donald Trump, was one of those whose personal information has been disclosed. He said he was planning to continue the National Archives and American files for violation of privacy laws and worries about identity theft.
“This should not have happened,” said Digénova during a telephone interview on Thursday. “I think it is the result of incompetent people who examine. I don’t think that has something to do with the precipitation of the process. The people who examined these documents did not do their job.”
His personal information appeared in documents relating to his work for a selected committee of the US Senate which investigated the abuses of power by government representatives in the 1970s, including the surveillance of American citizens.
Officials of the White House said Thursday that a plan was in place to help those whose personal information had been disclosed, including the surveillance of the credit offered by the national archives and a projection of the files which began on Wednesday to identify all the social security numbers which were published. Officials have also said that new social security numbers will be issued to affected people.
The White House did not answer questions about the reasons why personal information was not expelled.
“President Trump held his promise of maximum transparency by fully publishing the assassination of President John F. Kennedy,” said the White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt in a statement. “At the request of the White House, the National Archives and the Social Security Administration immediately set up an action plan to proactively help individuals whose personal information was published in the files.”
The national archives did not immediately respond to an email asking for comments.
The vast majority of records had already been published
Trump ordered the release of the remaining classified files relating to the assassination of the former president of 1963 shortly after being sworn in January. Tuesday evening Tuesday evening, around 2,200 files composed of more than 63,000 pages were displayed on the website of the National Archives. Many of these pages have revealed what had already been exposed.
The vast majority of more than six million pages of records, photographs, films, sound recordings and artifacts linked to the assassination had already been published.
The national archives have published evaluations of documents newly published on his website, but noted that there was not enough time on Wednesday to examine more than a small fraction.
The documents published this week have provided more details on the secret operations of the United States of the Cold War era in other countries, but they have not initially granted credits to the theories of the conspiracy on which Kennedy killed.
One of the newly not expelled documents, for example, reveals the number of social security of more than two dozen people looking for security authorizations in the 1990s to examine the documents related to the JFK for the examination board of the assassination files.
The national archives began to select documents on Wednesday to identify all social security numbers in the assassination files, said the White House.
The National Archives will share these figures with the Social Security Administration, which will identify the people who live and will issue them new figures, according to the White House. The National Archives will also offer credit supervisory services for those affected until they receive their new social security numbers, officials said.
Kennedy was killed during a visit to Dallas, when his procession ended his parade journey in the city center and the shots went from the Texas school deposit building on November 22, 1963. The police arrested Lee Harvey Oswald, 24, a former sailor who had positioned himself from a perch of elite shooter on the sixth floor. Two days later, Jack Ruby, a nightclub owner, fatally shot Oswald during a live transfer program live on television.