Secret Files Opening- CIA Is In a Trouble
Shortly after the assassination of US President John F. Kennedy in 1963, one reporter asked Chief of Supreme Court Earl Warren when complete report about president murder will be released to public. that you will complete a report about the murder to be released to the public. The first man of the court and the chairman of the Warren Commission then replied, "I will announce it for a while. But it might not be during your life.”
A half century later, the desire of journalists finally be fulfilled.
From 40 thousand documents on the murder of President Kennedy, 3,600 of them are still held in strict confidence. Therefore, a team of seven archivists at the highest authority are sent to the National Archives where they will, based on all the 40,000 documents, make a final report on the assassination of one of the most popular presidents in US history.
The deadline for publication of the report is October 2017.
Martha Murphy, chair of the department for special access to the National Archives, said that "2017 is still far away, and it all can change for two years”.
- I will do everything in my power to secret documents on the Kennedy assassination finally see the light of day. That is my only goal, that people finally know the truth. The only one that can stop me is the president of the United States - said Marta Murphy.
If the regulation on the publication of the report nevertheless comply, it could be quite a problem for the already degraded reputation of the Central Intelligence Agency of the United States (CIA).
The report on the Kennedy assassination and the work contains some of the darkest secrets and spy activities under the auspices of the CIA.
It is assumed that 3,600 unpublished pages of mentioned report contain details about the assassinations that the CIA carried out abroad, about front company to psychologists secretly employees who were giving false information to investigators about the mental state of Lee Harvey Oswald, accused of the murder of Kennedy.
Completing the puzzle of the murder of 35 of President of the United States of America is slowly coming to an end. There is one, the hardest step to the goal.
Every American is still waiting for answers to several unsolved questions about the Kennedy assassination.
Was Oswald, who traveled to Russia in 1959, acted alone, as the Warren Commission concluded?
Did CIA have previous knowledge that saved the Kennedy assassination?
Did the highest officials of the government then, and decades later deliberately obstructed the complete investigation to prevent the disclosure of "dirty laundry" of its secret services (read: CIA)?
According Murphy, which surveyed 3,600 unpublished pages, complete documentation will provide "bare insight into the Cold War United States and its secret services."
The official reason for not disclosing the aforementioned documents was justified by the "content of confidential information policy of the highest officials, jurors and identities of protected witnesses."