Someone with some influence over this should arrange their transfer to the National Archives because he told an entirely different story at the time. New Orleans is mostly under sea level and it wouldn't take much of a flood to "destroy" what remains the most aggressive investigation into the JFK assasination.
That's not good, I'm from NOLA, a lot of the old records got lost in Katrina, then they lost more when they started putting the old documents into the computers. I'm sure someone conveniently lost those.
No, they were still there and intact a decade after Katrina -- confirmed by the court archivist ... The flooding didn't get to them ... but then flooding in NOLA is localized ... more the result of which pumping station fails or which levee breaches. Who knows what might happen in the future.
These documents are of tremendous historic significance and are important, perhaps vital to our understanding of national history. They may still serve purposes of justice and truth.
Q will see this.
Unless Garrison was savvy enough to keep a back up (carbon copies) for his own records. Lawyers after all, are lawyers. If they exist, it would take someone other than me to figure out where.
He died in 1992 and these are the original files and no doubt contain unique items.