KILLEEN, Texas — The U.S. Army is not publicly releasing its full investigation into a 2016 training accident at a Texas military post that left nine people dead.

Eight soldiers and a West Point cadet died when their vehicle overturned while crossing Fort Hood’s Owl Creek during a flash flood on June 2, 2016.

Soldiers, families recall 2016 Fort Hood training accident that killed 9 troops Current and former service members remember the fallen of a 2016 training accident that killed eight soldiers and a West Point cadet.

The Killeen Daily Herald reported Saturday that the Army released its investigation report following an open records request. But the Army redacted over 14 pages of text, leaving unanswered the question of who was at fault.

A letter from the Army to the newspaper justified the redactions, saying they protect “the deliberations of safety board members.”

NCO blamed for accident that killed nine soldiers at Fort Hood Flash flood warnings had been issued and the crossing had been designated off-limits, but a platoon heading out for some Sergeant’s Time training on the morning of June 2, 2016 didn’t know that.

Kameron Robinson is a survivor of the training. He says families and survivors will never know if the report determined responsibility.