Sensitive personal information, including the social security numbers, was presented in the newly not edited John F. Kennedy attack, which was published this week, and this is not well together with the people concerned.
Joseph Digenova, a former campaign lawyer for US President Donald Trump, was among those whose personal data was announced. He said he planned to sue the US National Archives and records because he had violated data protection laws and was concerned about identity theft.
“It shouldn’t have happened,” said Digenova in a telephone interview on Thursday. “I think it is the result of incompetent people who carry out the review. I don’t think it has something to do with falling the process. The people who have checked these documents have not done their work.”
His personal data consisted of his work for a US Senate selection committee in which the power violations were examined by government officials in the 1970s, including the surveillance of the US citizens.
On Thursday, officials of the White House said that there was a plan to help those who have been disclosed, including the loan monitoring of the National Archives and a demonstration of the records that began on Wednesday to identify all published social security numbers. Officials also said that new social security numbers are issued to those affected.
The White House did not answer questions about why the personal data was not edited.
“President Trump has made his promise of maximum transparency by fully publishing the files in connection with the murder of President John F. Kennedy,” said Karoline Leavitt’s press spokesman, Karoline Leavitt. “At the request of the White House, the National Archives and the Social Insurance Administration immediately put together an action plan to proactively help people who were published in the files.”
The National Archives did not immediately respond to an e -mail that requested a comment.
The vast majority of the records had already been published
Trump ordered the publication of the remaining classified files in relation to the murder of the former president from 1963 shortly after swearing in January with regard to the murder of the former president. Around 2,200 files consisted of over 63,000 pages were published on Tuesday evening on the National Archive website. Many of these pages showed what had previously been reduced.
The vast majority of the more than six million pages with records, photographs, movies, sound recordings and artifacts in connection with the attack had previously been published.
However, the National Archives published reviews of the newly published documents on his website, but found that there was not enough time on Wednesday to check more than a small fraction of it.
The documents published this week provided further details about hidden US operations from the Cold War in other countries, but initially they initially believed in conspiracy theories about who killed Kennedy.
One of the newly not edit documents, for example, gives the social security numbers of more than two dozen people who are striving for security checks in the nineties to review JFK-related documents for the attack committee of the attack.
The national archive started checking the documents on Wednesday to identify all social security numbers in the attacks, according to the White House.
The national archives will share these figures with the social security authority, which, according to the White House, identifies people and give them new numbers. The National Archive will also offer services for those affected for creditors monitoring until they receive their new social security numbers, according to the officials.
Kennedy was killed during a visit to Dallas when his car collon ended his parade route in the city center and out of November 22, 1963, out of the textbook in Texas. The police arrested 24-year-old Lee Harvey Oswald, a former navy who had positioned himself from a Snifer Platz on the sixth stick. Two days later, Jack Ruby, a nightclub owner, was fatal to Oswald live on TV during a prison transfer.