If your drive contained a matter of national security, they'd dedicate the resources it took to get into it. Government organizations don't have time or money to throw at some random criminal's truecrypt drive so it's "un-crackable" in these cases. I don't think it's been cracked, at least not without some sort of brute-force method, which would take a lot of computing power and time. I don't think they wanted any part of dealing with the hassles of dealing with random government organizations trying to pressure them to exploit a back door that doesn't exist. Look what the government is doing with Apple. The developers tried to remain anonymous, and I think they saw the writing on the wall. You've read the truecrypt audit right? They didn't find any major problems with it. Some people have thought their message might have been a "canary", but I don't think so.
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