The U.S. National Archives has published a batch of newly declassified government records on Amelia Earhart, the American aviator who vanished over the Pacific in 1937, officials said.
Earhart went missing while on a pioneering round-the-world flight with navigator Fred Noonan, and her disappearance is one of the most tantalizing mysteries in aviation lore.
President Donald Trump ordered the declassification and release in September of all U.S. government records related to Earhart’s ill-fated final flight.
Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard said the documents released on Friday included “newly declassified files from the National Security Agency, information on Earhart’s last known communications, weather and plane conditions at the time, and potential search locations, as well as subsequent inquiries and theories regarding her disappearance.”
Further documents would be publicly released on the National Archives website on a “rolling basis” as they are declassified, Gabbard said in a statement.
The documents include a July 1937 radio log from Itasca, a U.S. Coast Guard cutter that was deployed to support Earhart’s flight around the world. Itasca was the last ship to have radio contact with Earhart and Noonan before their aircraft disappeared. The phrase “Earhart Unheard” appears numerous times in the log. According to the National Archives, the last communication from Earhart’s plane came at about 8:43 a.m. on Jul 2, 1937: “We are on the line 157 337 wl rept msg we wl rept…”
The U.S. National Archives published a batch of newly declassified government records on Friday about Amelia Earhart.
National Archives
The documents also include military reports about the search as well as memos, telegrams and newspaper clippings.
Among them is the July 16, 1960 front page of the San Mateo Times with the headline: “Ex-Serviceman Claims He Saw Earhart Grave.” Former Army Sergeant Thomas Devine told the newspaper that while serving in Saipan, a native on the island showed him an unmarked grave of two white people “who came from the sky.” Devine said believed it to be the grave of Earhart and Noonan.
In a separate newspaper article, dated Nov. 18, 1970, a researcher claimed that a former Pan American Airways employee had records indicating Earhart survived the crash and sent a distress call that was received by the airline.
The U.S. National Archives published a batch of newly declassified government records on Friday about Amelia Earhart.
National Archives
Many of the thousands of documents published online on Friday have been released previously by the National Archives or made available to researchers, and aviation experts consider it unlikely that the latest material will shed any new light on Earhart’s disappearance.
Earhart’s final flight has fascinated historians for decades and spawned books, movies and theories galore.
The prevailing belief is that Earhart, 39, and Noonan, 44, ran out of fuel and ditched their twin-engine Lockheed Electra in the Pacific near Howland Island while on one of the final legs of their epic journey.
Earhart, who won fame in 1932 as the first woman to fly solo across the Atlantic, took off on May 20, 1937 from Oakland, California, hoping to become the first woman to fly around the world.
She and Noonan vanished on July 2, 1937 after taking off from Lae, Papua New Guinea, on a challenging 2,500-mile flight to refuel on Howland Island, a speck of a US territory between Australia and Hawaii.
They never made it.
Efforts to find the aircraft have continued to this day. Last month, an expedition to try to locate Earhart’s plane on a remote island in the Pacific was delayed until next year.
A team of researchers was planning to travel to Nikumaroro Island in early November to determine whether something known as the Taraia Object — a visual anomaly seen in satellite and other imagery — is Earhart’s aircraft. They are now awaiting additional clearances from local authorities as they work through the permit approvals, and cannot go later this year due to the start of cyclone season.
A satellite image shows the Taraia Object in a lagoon on Nikumaroro Island.
Rick Pettigrew, Archaeological Legacy Institute
The underwater object has been visible in photos dating back to 1938, the year after Earhart and Noonan disappeared.
Researchers previously said there is “very strong” evidence that the object, which is in a lagoon on Nikumaroro, a small island in Kiribati about halfway between Australia and Hawaii, is the iconic aviator’s plane. Some, however, have expressed skepticism. “We’ve looked there in that spot, and there’s nothing there,” Ric Gillespie, executive director of the International Group for Historic Aircraft Recovery, told NBC News in July.
A team of researchers from Purdue and the Archaeological Legacy Institute plan to take photos and videos of the site, then use magnetometers and sonar devices to scan the area. The item will then be dredged and lifted from the water so researchers can attempt to identify it.
Last year, an expedition team captured a sonar image in the Pacific Ocean that appeared to resemble Earhart’s plane resting at the bottom of the sea. It turned out to be a rock formation.
Amelia Earhart poses for photos as she arrives in Southampton, England, after her transatlantic flight on the “Friendship” from Burry Point, Wales, June 26, 1928.
Washington — A branch of the National Archives released a mostly unredacted version of Democratic Rep. Mikie Sherrill’s military records to Nicholas De Gregorio, an ally of Jack Ciattarelli, her GOP opponent in the New Jerseygovernor’s race. The disclosure potentially violates the Privacy Act of 1974 and exemptions established under the Freedom of Information Act.
The documents, which were also obtained by CBS News, appear to show that the National Personnel Records Center, a wing of the National Archives and Records Administration charged with maintaining personnel records for service members and civil servants of the U.S. government, released Sherrill’s full military file — almost completely unredacted. CBS News discovered the egregious blunder while investigating whether Sherrill was involved in the 1994 Naval Academy scandal, in which more than 100 midshipmen were implicated in cheating on an exam. Sherrill was not accused of cheating and said her only involvement was not informing on her fellow classmates.
The documents included Sherrill’s Social Security number, which appears on almost every page, home addresses for her and her parents, life insurance information, Sherrill’s performance evaluations and the nondisclosure agreement between her and the U.S. government to safeguard classified information.
Rep. Mikie Sherrill (D-NJ) speaks at a hearing on Capitol Hill on Feb. 28, 2023.
Kevin Dietsch / Getty Images
The only details redacted in the document are the Social Security numbers of her former superiors. The files appear to be the same ones Sherrill requested in August 2017 from the National Personnel Records Center, or NPRC, according to a signature verification page in the documents.
Contacted by CBS News, the NPRC told CBS News that a technician did not follow standard operating procedures for releasing records, and should only have released portions eligible under FOIA rules.
“The technician should NOT have released the entire record,” Grace McCaffrey of the National Archives and Records Administration, said in an email to CBS News’ questions.
McCaffrey said the Archives became aware of the breach on Tuesday and immediately initiated a review of internal controls, including how and why the technician did not follow standard operating procedures. The National Personnel Records Center also alerted the agency’s inspector general to the breach and said it contacted Sherrill’s congressional office to apologize.
Political campaigns, opposition research firms and news organizations often seek the military records of current or former service members running for elected office for both vetting purposes and to better inform voters. Military veterans and the next of kin of a deceased former member may request the full breadth of their military service records. The full file is only available to the general public 62 years after they finish their military service. When others request those records, only parts of the military file are released, and sections are redacted for privacy or national security reasons.
During the tightening New Jersey governor’s race — a new poll shows Sherrill and Ciattarelli tied — Republicans allied with Ciattarelli have been examining Sherrill’s military record, looking for information about the Naval Academy cheating scandal, in which over a hundred midshipmen were implicated in cheating on the final electrical engineering exam, a notoriously difficult course required for all third-year students who are not engineering majors.
Sherrill had an unblemished career in the Navy and as a midshipman received a Navy Achievement Medal in 1991 for saving the life of a fellow classmate. However, she does not appear in a commencement program obtained by CBS News on May 25, 1994, the date of the Naval Academy graduation. The program was confirmed to be authentic by the U.S. Naval Academy.
Sherrill does appear in the Naval Academy yearbook for 1994. The U.S. Naval Academy and Naval Personnel Command both told CBS News she graduated and was commissioned on May 25, 1994, which aligns with the date she entered active duty, according to her service records.
When asked by CBS News why her name does not appear in the commencement program, Sherrill said in a statement: “When I was an undergraduate at the Naval Academy[,] I didn’t turn in some of my classmates, so I didn’t walk, but graduated and was commissioned as an officer in the U.S. Navy, serving for nearly ten years with the highest level of distinction and honor.”
She added: “That Jack Ciattarelli and the Trump administration are illegally weaponizing my records for political gain is a violation of anyone who has ever served our country. No veteran’s record is safe.”
Contacted by CBS News, the Ciattarelli campaign did not immediately respond to a request for comment regarding Sherrill’s claim. The White House referred the matter to the National Archives.
De Gregorio, a Marine veteran who unsuccessfully ran as a Republican for Congress in New Jersey, told CBS News: “Given the charged political environment … Rep. Sherrill will no doubt seek to paint my actions as nefarious and the records as leaked by the Trump Administration to injure her, which as we both know is completely and totally false on both counts.”
De Gregorio told CBS News that Chris Russell, a Republican consultant in the state, had asked him to see what he could find on Sherrill.
“He [Russell] asked me if I could help him at all, and my first stop was, let me see what I can find from FOIA, and it was really the first time I’d ever done it,” said De Gregorio.
In May, De Gregorio, submitted a FOIA request to the NPRC for Sherrill’s records. On June 11, De Gregorio received an email from the NPRC saying they had no records for a veteran named “Sherill.” The Archives had omitted the second “r” from Sherrill’s last name.
On June 12, De Gregorio told CBS News he called NPRC’s customer service line, which routed him to a “real, helpful person.” CBS News has learned that the technician at NPRC accessed a system to retrieve Sherrill’s Social Security number. And on June 30, her records were transmitted to De Gregorio, who said he gave the file to Ciattarelli’s campaign but was surprised by what he received.
“When I saw [Sherrill’s] Social (Security number), I was shocked,” said De Gregorio. “All of a sudden, the NPRC decides to give it to [me] a random guy. I made no bones like, I wasn’t her, I wasn’t a family member. There was no relationship there. And so I didn’t know what to expect. So, I guess I’m a little shocked and kind of disgusted that the social was there.”
CBS News reviewed De Gregorio’s request to the Archives and found it properly acknowledged that personal information and medical details would be redacted. The Archives told CBS News, “We do not believe that there was any attempt to deceive NPRC staff in this case.”
De Gregorio later told CBS News that Ciattarelli’s campaign did not hire or encourage him to access the files. Scott Levins, the NPRC director, on Monday sent a letter to De Gregorio admitting the Archives’ “serious error” and said, “I apologize for our mistake and ask that you please do NOT further disseminate the record that was sent to you in error.”
Sherrill’s campaign was notified of the breach on Monday. In a letter to the congresswoman, NPRC apologized and said it was coordinating with the Navy, which is the legal custodian of the records. The records center also offered identity protection and free credit monitoring services.
Two years ago, Republican Reps. Don Bacon of Nebraska and Zach Nunn of Iowa were among 11 individuals whose records had been impacted by an unauthorized release from the Air Force Personnel Center Military Records Branch to a Democratic-aligned group. Politico reported Abraham Payton, of the research firm Due Diligence Group, had requested the records for the stated purpose of “Benefits,” “Employment,” and “Other.” Due Diligence was paid just over $110,000 by the House Democratic campaign, according to the Federal Election Commission records. The Air Force, in notifying Bacon of the breach, said Payton had requested the records “inappropriately,” and a House Judiciary subcommittee launched a probe in March 2023, but it is not clear whether it was completed.
The unauthorized releases outraged Republicans in Congress. House Republicans attempted to stop the Defense Department from releasing summaries of the service records of current or former U.S. military members without the consent of the member, or if deceased, their next of kin, according to NBC News, but did not succeed.
Journalists and veterans who investigate stolen valor claims said at the time the proposed legislation would effectively end independent examinations of individuals exaggerating their service record or violating the Stolen Valor Act of 2013, a federal law that makes it a crime to falsely claim to have received certain military decorations or awards with the intent of gaining a tangible benefit.
Sherrill’s political foes have also sought information about whether Sherrill had ever exaggerated her rank after leaving the Navy. Congressional records show she was selected for advancement to lieutenant commander in Sept. 2003. Records obtained through a FOIA request by CBS News and inquiries of the U.S. Naval Academy and Naval Personnel Command show Sherrill left the Navy at the rank of lieutenant in December 2003, before she received the promotion.
CBS News found that in 2020, her campaign sent out political emails that incorrectly used the lieutenant commander rank. Also, former President Joe Biden referred to Sherrill as a “lieutenant commander” in his remarks in Oct. 2021 while touting his Build Back Better and infrastructure deal.
But CBS News did not find any instances where Sherrill herself misrepresented her military rank. Anthony Anderson, an Army veteran who is one of the country’s most prominent “stolen valor” detectives, told CBS News that the rank issue did not rise to the level of her stealing valor either under the Stolen Valor Act of 2013 or how the term is used within the military community.
James LaPorta is a national security coordinating producer in CBS News’ Washington bureau. He is a former U.S. Marine infantryman and veteran of the Afghanistan war.
The National Archives has been in the news lately, not so much for what is in its collection, but for what was missing. After former President Donald Trump and then-Vice President Biden held on to records when they left office that should have been sent to the Archives… we wanted to know more… about the small federal agency in charge of safeguarding America’s past.
After a few months inside, we came to appreciate that the Archives are the country’s safety deposit box, reading room, and paper shredder rolled into one.
At the heart of the institution are the documents that have been at the heart of the nation, for nearly 250 years.
Colleen Shogan: (footsteps) There’s 39 steps here that lead up to the entrance. And that’s 39 framers who signed the Constitution.
Norah O’Donnell: Oh, wow. Look at this.
Colleen Shogan, the archivist of the United States, is responsible for America’s records. The main attractions are in a building in Washington that was inspired by ancient Rome, and built to be a temple to history.
National Archives Rotunda
60 Minutes
Each year, more than a million people make the trip to see these national treasures in person.
Norah O’Donnell: This building, the Rotunda, was built as a shrine for many of these documents. But they didn’t arrive until later.
Colleen Shogan: That’s correct. The building was completed in 1937. But the Declaration and the Constitution did not arrive till 1952.
They were in the possession of the Library of Congress, which refused to turn them over, until President Truman got involved…and they were delivered from Capitol Hill by the U.S. military.
Norah O’Donnell: Ah, the Declaration of Independence.
Colleen Shogan: Yes.
Norah O’Donnell: Why is it so faded?
Colleen Shogan: It was exposed to considerable light and the elements.
In the 19th Century, the U.S. Patent office put the declaration on display near a window. that and other missteps did so much damage, nearly all you can make out today is John Hancock’s “John Hancock.”
To preserve them, these original documents that are a beacon for democracy are now intentionally kept in the dark. They are guarded around the clock, in bulletproof cases designed to remain sealed for 100 years.
All federal employees are required to take an oath to defend the Constitution. But for Colleen Shogan, it’s literally her job – and the founding documents are just the start.
Colleen Shogan: We have approximately 13.5 billion paper records here at the National Archives.
Norah O’Donnell: How many feet of film?
Colleen Shogan: Oh, the film would go around the globe three and a half times.
Norah O’Donnell: How many photographs?
Colleen Shogan: We have millions and millions of photographs as well.
Norah O’Donnell: And how many artifacts?
Colleen Shogan: Over 700,000 artifacts.
Norah O’Donnell and Archivist Colleen Shogan
60 Minutes
Most of that massive collection is kept outside of Washington, stored at dozens of facilities all across the country that span millions of cubic feet, including four underground cave complexes in the Midwest.
Colleen Shogan: For our civilian records center in Valmeyer, Illinois, our archivists actually use bikes (laugh) because it’s about a mile from one end of the facility to the other.
Then there’s the stuff they don’t even keep – only about 3% of government paperwork is deemed important enough to preserve for posterity. Documents can sit for years before being retained or more likely, destroyed. At the Washington National Records Center outside DC, there are 20 football fields of files, stacked floor to ceiling, awaiting their fate.
Until 1934, federal agencies stored their own records, with varying degrees of success. When the Archives was created, work began to restore 158 years’ worth of dusty, forgotten documents.
To see how some of America’s oldest paper records have held up, we met Trevor Plante, who is in charge of more than two billion written documents in Washington.
Norah O’Donnell: So this is original from 1778?
Trevor Plante: Yes.
During the Revolutionary War, the Continental Congress wanted George Washington and his officers to pledge allegiance in writing to their new nation, after they survived a brutal winter at Valley Forge.
Trevor Plante: So the irony is that the Army can barely afford to feed them, clothe them, house them, supply them with arms and ammunition. But, like, “here’s all this paperwork we wanted filled-out and returned.”
Norah O’Donnell: And so that–
Trevor Plante: So these–
Norah O’Donnell: –is George Washington’s handwriting and–
Trevor Plante: Yes.
Norah O’Donnell: –signature?
Trevor Plante: Yes– correct, yep. Yep.
Norah O’Donnell: And then, here.
Trevor Plante: This officer became very popular a couple years ago, Alexander Hamilton. We don’t often think of him as “Alex Hamilton,” but he had signed his name “Alex Hamilton”–
Norah O’Donnell: Wow.
Trevor Plante: –on his oath.
Trevor Plante has a theory about why one of his favorite documents looks so unique.
Norah O’Donnell and Trevor Plante and National Archives Director of Textual Records Trevor Plante
60 Minutes
Trevor Plante: This is a resolution– passed by Congress in– early 1865. It– once it was ratified, it became the 13th Amendment to the Constitution. And if you notice on here, there’s several different handwritings for the 13th Amendment. So we speculate that these clerks realized what a big deal this was at– at the time, and literally wanted to have a hand in history.
Norah O’Donnell: Because the 13th Amendment abolished slavery.
Trevor Plante: Abolished slavery in the United States, exactly.
Plante likes to say Archives keeps the nation’s receipts, and he means it – like the treaty for the Louisiana Purchase –
– signed by Napoleon Bonaparte himself.
There’s also the deed of gift that came with the Statue of Liberty from France in 1884.
And the check Russia cashed when the U.S. bought Alaska in 1867 for $7.2 million.
In 1988, after Archives’ main building in Washington ran out of room, Congress funded the construction of a state-of-the-art facility in College Park, Maryland.
From there, Deputy Archivist Jay Bosanko runs day-to-day operations.
He invited us into their most restricted vault, where cameras usually aren’t allowed, to see relics of a dark chapter in world history – Hitler’s last will and testament; and Eva Braun’s diary.
Jay Bosanko: This happens to be from 1935.
Norah O’Donnell: How is it that the U.S. government got its hands on Hitler’s mistress’s diary?
Jay Bosanko: So this was– quite literally sort of the– the– the spoils of war. This was captured– by U.S. Armed Forces. Then it transferred to us at the National Archives.
Some of the items inside this vault only became historically significant with age, like this letter from a young Fidel Castro to President Franklin D. Roosevelt.
Norah O’Donnell: So there may be treasures like this buried in boxes–
Jay Bosanko: Yet–
Norah O’Donnell: –in lots of places.
Jay Bosanko: –yet to be discovered. You never know when you’re opening a box what you might find next.
… or who might be opening it. Researchers, writers, and history buffs from around the country and the world come to the archives to make discoveries. We saw a group from Japan cataloging the American occupation that followed World War II.
And a U.S. Army unit on a special mission – combing through a million old Army files looking for Black and Native American soldiers, who were once overlooked, but might now be awarded the Medal of Honor.
Jay Bosanko: The records that we hold– need to be made available. We need to bring the stories that are captured in those records alive.
60 Minutes
Norah O’Donnell: There’s a record here at College Park that I want to show you and our viewers. This isthe resignation letter of Richard Nixon, August 9th, 1974.
Jay Bosanko: This is an incredibly important document.
Before the Watergate scandal, records belonged to the presidents who created them. But after President Nixon sought to destroy audio tapes with evidence of potential crimes, Congress took action.
Jay Bosanko: When an individual controls the records, they control the story, they control what the American people can know or not know about their presidency.
Norah O’Donnell: When did individual presidents stop owning the records that they created?
Jay Bosanko: Not until 1978 when the Presidential Records Act was signed. And so starting with President Reagan, now the records of a presidency belong to the American people and not to the president.
In 2021, former President Trump tested that law when he took dozens of boxes, including almost 340 documents bearing classification markings, to his home in Florida. Mr. Trump was eventually charged with 40 felonies, including for allegedly refusing to turn over some of the papers. The case was dismissed, but the Justice Department is appealing.President Joe Biden was also investigated over more than 80 documents with classification markings that he had from when he was vice president and a senator. Mr. Biden cooperated with the investigation and was not charged.
Jay Bosanko told us the Archives is simply the custodian of the documents all presidents are required to turn over. Enforcing the law is up to the Justice Department.
Norah O’Donnell: What is potentially lost when presidential records are not transferred to the National Archives?
Jay Bosanko: That strikes at the very heart of– the historical record, the completeness of it, the ability to understand decisions. And so it’s important for historians, and ultimately the American people to understand all of the pieces that came in and– and made up that decision-making.
Those pieces of history start to become available to reporters and scholars five years after a presidency ends, at the 15 presidential libraries in the Archives system.
Jay Bosanko: When that five-year window hits, almost immediately we have a backlog of thousands of FOIA requests that we can’t possibly respond to within the ten days under the Freedom of Information Act.
When Colleen Shogan became archivist last year she inherited a flat budget, and a mountain of Freedom of Information Act requests.
Norah O’Donnell: At the George W. Bush Presidential Library, for example, a FOIA request might come back with a 12-year wait.
Colleen Shogan: Uh-huh (affirm). That’s because of the– the– the– the extreme interest in those records.And I think the way that we are gonna make headway on this in the near future is going to be through technology.
The Archives’ goal to scan and digitize all 13-and-a-half billion paper records in its collection seems ambitious. Only 2% of their holdings are currently available online. We obtained a recent memo drafted by senior leaders at the agency, who are concerned limited resources have put it at “serious risk” of “mission failure.”
Norah O’Donnell: Is it even possible to bring the Archives into the 21st century before the start of the 22nd century without some significant increase of resources?
Colleen Shogan: I think we can do it. We will do it– we’ll– gonna have to reprioritize, we’re gonna have to look at our budget. But we will rely upon our institutions, upon Congress, and of course upon the executive branch to support us along the way.
While the Archives’ path to digital transformation will be a work in progress for decades, a big change is coming soon to the rotunda. In 2026, the Emancipation Proclamation and the 19th Amendment will be put on permanent display. They are the first major additions to the rotunda in 72 years. It was the archivist’s decision. She says it’s not just to honor the nation’s past, but a reminder that America’s next chapter is not yet written.
Produced by Keith Sharman and Roxanne Feitel. Broadcast associate, Callie Teitelbaum. Edited by Craig Crawford.
Norah O’Donnell is the anchor and managing editor of the “CBS Evening News,” anchor of CBS News Election Specials and a 60 Minutes contributing correspondent. O’Donnell is a multiple Emmy Award-winning journalist with nearly three decades of experience covering the biggest stories in the world and conducting impactful, news-making interviews.
The U.S. government’s ability to safeguard its most sensitive information is under fire. On Friday, former Vice President Mike Pence acknowledged “mistakes were made” after classified documents were recently found in his Indiana home. The discoveries with Pence, former President Trump and President Biden have prompted the National Archives to ask every living former president and vice president to check for classified records. But many in Congress are questioning why the executive branch was not more careful. Christina Ruffini is at the White House with the latest.
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