Donald Trump says that he 'always' believed that Lee Harvey Oswald killed former President John F. Kennedy in Houston – but has speculated that the shooter might have had some help.
The president made the comments in a wide interview with Outkick founder Clay Travis Onboard Air Force One on Saturday, after Travis had asked the supreme commander if he thinks Oswald JFK killed.
“I do that,” Trump replied. “And I have always had the feeling that he, but of course, helped?”
The Ministry of Justice has long maintained that Oswald, 24, only acted when he opened fire on the Presidential Motorcade on November 22, 1963 from the sixth floor of the Texas School Book Depository.
But Oswald denied the claims and declared the police famous that he was 'just a patsy' before he was also shot on November 24, 1963 – and to this day many Americans believe that Kennedy's death was the result of a conspiracy.
Some even claimed that Oswald may have received help from the US government, the Mafia, the CIA, the Cuban government or the Soviet Union.
After decades of speculation, Trump ordered the federal government to release more than 2,000 pages with documents related to the Kennedy murder.
The trove of top -secret files that were released on Tuesday included typed reports and handwritten notes about decades -including details of a top -cia agent who claimed that the deep state was responsible, Oswald was a 'bad shot' and that the secret service had warned that Kennedy would be killed in August.

President Donald Trump doubted that Lee Harvey Oswald only performed in the murder of former President John F Kennedy in an interview with Outkick founder Clay Travis on Saturday

His comments came only a few days after the federal government had released more than 2,000 pages of documents with regard to the murder of Kennedy
The roll -out of the files surprised Trump's national security team, which racing 24 hours to assess security risks prior to the publication.
Experts have warned about searching the information that they do not expect the release to destroy the long concept of what happened or reveals landslides.
Trump, himself, also noticed in his interview with Outkick that 'the papers have proved somewhat unpectacular.
“I don't think there is something that crushes,” he said, adding that the audience can make their own 'determination' about the notorious murderer.
But those who have dug thousands of pages have already discovered some intriguing details.
They discovered that one of the many documents was a memo released on a passage from the left -wing political magazine walls from June 1967 on intelligence agent, CIA Informant and former American army captain John Garrett Underhill Jr.
“The day after the murder, Gary Underhill Washington hurriedly left. Late in the evening he appeared in a friend's house in New Jersey, he was very agitated: “The passage starts.
'A small clique within the CIA was responsible for the murder, he trusted, and he was afraid of his life and would probably have to leave the country. Less than six months later, Underhill was found shot in his apartment in Washington. The coroner ruled it a suicide: 'The passage continued.

The Ministry of Justice has long maintained that Oswald, 24, only acted when he opened fire on the presidential motorcade on November 22, 1963

Oswald shot on the motorcade of the then president (photo) from the sixth floor of the Texas School Book Depository
It noted that he was on intimate conditions with a number of high-ranking CIA officers.
The Passage was shared several times on Tuesday evening by conservatives on social media. But others rejected it, pointed out that the magazine Passage was publicly available and already discussed for decades.
Another document that made the rounds in the Maga World Tuesday evening was aimed at Oswald.
One rule in the document stated that KGB Oswald was closely monitoring while he was in the USSR. But files indicated that Oswald was a bad recording when he tried to archive the goal request in the USSR. '
Another released detail was a letter from a man named Sergyj Czornonoh in 1978 on the British embassy.
He claimed that he was being held in London on July 18, 1963 and was questioned by the authorities.
Czornonoh said he told them about Lee Harvey Oswald and said he was planning to kill the president.
He added that he warned the American vice -consul Tom Blackshear about Oswald's plans, which tried to bridge to Russia.

Oswald denied the claims and declared the police famous that he was 'just a patsy' before he was also shot
Yet some crucial information was missing in the files, experts say.
The transcript of the first conversation between President Lyndon Johnson and CIA director John McCone after the murder on 1963 has still not been released to the public, author James Johnston told USA Today.
He said that the document could help answering questions about possible involvement of Cuba in the murder of Kennedy, because the president had tried famous to use the CIA to kill the communist dictator Fidel Castro.
McCone has previously been accused of storing 'Brandwin' information of the Warren Commission that the murder has investigated, as reported by Polico.
The sensitive information revolved around the existence of suddenly to kill Castro, who placed the CIA 'In Cahoots with the Mafia'.
Without this information, the Warren Commission – which ultimately stated that Oswald acted only in the murder – never looked at whether the shooter could have had compliciters in Cuba or elsewhere the president wanted to die.
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Jefferson Morley, vice-president of the Mary Ferrell Foundation, a repository for files with regard to the murder, also said that the documents released on Tuesday did not contain two-thirds of the promised files, one of the recently discovered FBI files or 500 internal entry services.
Yet in a statement about X he said that the release is 'an encouraging start', and notes that many of the 'unbridled overclassification of trivial information has been eliminated' from the documents.
The vast majority of the National Archives collection of more than 6 million pages with records, photos, films, sound recordings and artifacts with regard to the murder were previously released.