Trump to declass the files of Amelia Earhart after a 90 -year mystery

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President Donald Trump said on Friday that he would declare the files related to Amelia Earhart, the aviation pioneer who became the first woman to fly solo constantly in the United States and who disappeared almost 90 years ago.
In a social article of truth, Trump said that he had been questioned about Earhart and his last flight.
“Amelia has made almost three-quarters of the world of the world before it was suddenly, and without notice, has never been revised,” he wrote. “His disappearance, almost 90 years ago, captivated millions. I order my administration to declassify and release all the government’s files linked to Amelia Earhart, her last trip and everything else about her.”
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This photo of May 20, 1937, provided by the Paragon agency, shows the Aviator Amelia Earhart at the tail of its Electra plane, taken at Burbank airport in Burbank, California. (Albert Bresnik / The Paragon Agency via AP)
The researchers have long sought answers on the disappearance of 1937 of Earhart on the Pacific Ocean during his fateful attempt to fly around the world. The disappearance has been the subject of many conspiracy theories.
In his article, Trump described it as “aviation pioneer, the first woman to fly solo through the Atlantic Ocean, and (someone who) has made many other” first “of aviation.”
In July, Kimberlyn King-Hinds, the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands delegate to the House of Representatives, wrote to Trump asking him to declass the documents related to Earhart.
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“By continuing the clarity of my voters, I am aware that the American government can still have documents or files related to the Earhart course and to the final place that have not yet been made public,” wrote King-Hinds. “If such records existed, their release would significantly contribute to our understanding of one of the most revered aviators in America and could finally shed light on the last chapter of his remarkable life.
“A national icon, Amelia Earhart embodied the courage, determination and the pioneering spirit of America,” she added. “However, the mystery surrounding its last flight continues to generate a debate and speculation almost ninety years later.”

Amelia Earhart in a 1937 file image. President Donald Trump promised on Friday to declass the documents related to Earhart and his last flight. (Miami Herald / Tribune News Service via Getty Images)
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Since taking office, Trump has declared documents related to the assassinations of former president John F. Kennedy, of his brother Robert F. Kennedy and Martin Luther King Jr.