Crucial information was missing in the JFK murder files that were released by the Trump administration on Tuesday, according to an expert.
The transcript of the first conversation between President Lyndon Johnson and CIA director John McCone after the murder on 1963 has still not been released to the public, author James Johnston told USA Today.
The document could help answer questions about possible involvement of Cuba in the murder of Kennedy, because the president had tried to use the CIA famous to kill the communist dictator Fidel Castro.
McCone has previously been accused of storing 'Brandwin' information of the Warren Commission that the murder has investigated, as reported by Polico.
The sensitive information revolved around the existence of suddenly to kill Castro, who placed the CIA 'In Cahoots with the Mafia'.
Without this information, the Warren committee never looked at whether Oswald could have had compliciters in Cuba or elsewhere that JFK wanted to die as a retribution because he tried to kill Castro.
The cover of McCone was claimed to be 'benign' because he and other top-CIA officials wanted the committee to concentrate on Lee Harvey Oswald, whom they really believed as a lonely shooter.

A missing document could offer answers if Cuba had something to do with the murder of President John F Kennedy in 1963

CIA director John McCone and President Lyndon B. Johnson can be seen in the Oval Office in 1965

The files contain typed reports and handwritten notes in decades, including details of a top -cia agent who claimed that the Deep State was responsible and Lee Harvey Oswald (photo) as a 'poor shot'
More than 63,000 pages with records with regard to the murder on 1963 were released on Tuesday after an order from President Donald Trump, many without the editors that historians had confused for years and helped conspiracy theories to fuel.
The US National Archives and Records Administration on its website about 2,200 files with the documents.
They include typed reports and handwritten notes in decades, including details of a top -cia agent who claimed that the deep state was responsible, Oswald was a 'poor shot' and that secret service had been warned that Kennedy would be killed three months before the murder.
The roll -out of the files surprised Trump's national security team, which racing 24 hours to assess security risks prior to the publication.
When the files were released around 7 p.m., it led to widespread recoil, from liberals who claimed that it was only a repetition of a similar decrease in Joe Biden years ago, to Maga -fans furiously that the pages still contain editors and let questions that the experts describe to describe the files as 'IMPENETABLEFE'.
The vast majority of the National Archives collection of more than 6 million pages with records, photos, films, sound recordings and artifacts with regard to the murder were previously released.

President Donald Trump said during a media event in the Kennedy Center that the files would all be released on Tuesday
Before Tuesday, researchers had estimated that 3,000 to 3,500 files have still not been released, in whole or in part. And last month the FBI said it had discovered around 2,400 new records with regard to the murder.
Jefferson Morley, vice -president of the Mary Ferrell Foundation, a repository for files related to the murder, said in a statement on the social platform X that the release is 'an encouraging start'. He said that much of the “unbridled overclassification of trivial information has been eliminated” from the documents.
The National Archives said on its website that in accordance with the President's Directive would include the release 'All records that were previously withheld for classification'. But Morley said that what was released on Tuesday, not two-thirds of the promised files, one of the recently discovered FBI files or 500 Internal Revenue Service Records.
The interest in details about the murder of Kennedy has been intense in recent decades, with countless conspiracy theories produced over several shooters and involvement by the Soviet Union and Mafia.
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JFK was killed on November 22, 1963, during a visit to Dallas, when his motorcycle gift finished his parader route and shots called from the Texas School Book Depository Building.
The police arrested 24-year-old Lee Harvey Oswald, who had placed himself on the sixth floor of a sniper.


Two days later, the owner of the nightclub Jack Ruby Oswald shot deadly during a prison transfer, so that a spoke the earlier conspiracy theories – that Oswald was killed to stop talking about the person who had set him up.
A year after the murder, the Warren Commission, who founded President Johnson, concluded to investigate that Oswald only acted and that there was no evidence of a conspiracy.
But that did not suppress a web of alternative theories during the past decades.
One of the most popular theories claims that there was a second shooter who fired shots on JFK from an now iconic 'Grassy Knoll' to the right of his car when it passed.
A definitive proof of that claim has never been shared.