2. Where are the missing documents?
The 888-page report of the Warren Commission, which consists of approximately five million pages, remains somewhat incomplete as many documents have been withheld due to many government agencies (most likely the CIA) lobbying, successfully, to postpone full disclosure.
After a law was passed in 1992 requiring all assassination investigation records to be disclosed by the end of October 2017, academics and the public alike have had an unquenchable thirst for these missing pages and it was believed that finally, many unanswered questions would be put to rest when the remaining files would see the light of day.
Despite the National Archives releasing 19,045 additional documents from the JFK assassination files on the required date, a curious decision was made by the Trump administration to withhold some material in the archive for extra review.
The justification made was due to “identifiable national security, law enforcement, and foreign affairs concerns,” With Trump adding that he was ordering agencies to “re-review each of the redactions over the next three years,” and set a deadline for further release of documents of October 26, 2021.
So for now, it looks like we will have to stay thirsty. That is if the new deadline is honored, which many believe it won’t because they think that those files contain some, if not many, information that would blow the official narrative out of the water.