Thousands of pages of documents related to Amelia Earhart’s disappearance are now public — part of a push for transparency ordered earlier this year — but experts say the release is unlikely to solve one of aviation’s most famous mysteries.
On Sept. 26, President Donald Trump posted on Truth Social , sharing that he was “ordering (his) administration to declassify and release all government records related to Amelia Earhart, her final trip, and everything else about her.”
This first batch — more than 4,600 pages in 53 files — was published online Nov. 14 and includes a picture of Earhart, radio logs, weather reports, search-and-rescue documents, and decades of memos and newspaper clippings focused on Earhart’s final hours and the hunt that followed.
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