For history's sake it really would have been good if more of the Warren
Commission attorneys, especially those who did the real lifting, had put
down their accounts in some organized fashion within ten years or so of
their work.
Some of them originally took up the task of defending and explaining what
they had done, but most were I suspect worn out from trying to swat down
the flies constantly launched by Lane. That's too bad because there were
genuine issues both with regard to the truth about the assassination AND
with regard to the actual workings of the Commission that would have been
worth exploring in a more objective, less confrontational way.
By the time the HSCA tried to do this too much time had passed and there
were a lot of fixed views set in by time and reaction to accusations that
may not have been accurate as to what was thought and done at the time.
It's a tricky topic for a young historian to get into, but it really would
be good if someone put in the work before all of these folks die.