(Testimony of Mrs. Lee Harvey Oswald Resumed)
Mr. Rankin.
Before you went to New Orleans, had you seen anyone from the FBI?
Mrs. Oswald.
The FBI visited us in Fort Worth when we lived on Mercedes Street.
Mr. Rankin.
Was that in August 1962?
Mrs. Oswald.
Probably.
Mr. Rankin.
Do you know the names of the FBI agents that visited you then?
Mrs. Oswald.
No, I don't remember that Lee had just returned from work and we were getting ready to have dinner when a car drove up and a man introduced himself and asked Lee to step out and talk to him.
There was another man in the car. They talked for about 2 hours and I was very angry, because everything had gotten cold. This meant more work for me. I asked who these were, and he was very upset over the fact that the FBI was interested in him.
Mr. Rankin.
Did that interview take place in the car?
Mrs. Oswald.
Yes.
Mr. Rankin.
Did your husband tell you what they said to him and what he said to them?
Mrs. Oswald.
I don't know to what extent this was true, but Lee said that the FBI had told him that in the event some Russians might visit him and would try to recruit him to work for them, he should notify the FBI agents. I don't know to what extent this was true. But perhaps Lee just said that.
Mr. Rankin.
Did our husband say anything about the FBI asking him to work for them?
Mrs. Oswald.
No, he didn't tell me.
Mr. Rankin.
Did he say anything more about what they said to him in this interview?
Mrs. Oswald.
No, he didn't tell me verbatim, but he said that they saw Communists in everybody and they are very much afraid and inasmuch as I had returned from Russia.
Mr. Rankin.
Did he tell you that they had asked him whether he had acted as an agent or was asked to be an agent for the Russians?
Mrs. Oswald.
No.
Mr. Rankin.
Do you recall any other----
Mrs. Oswald.
Excuse me. They did ask him about whether the Russians had proposed that he be an agent for them.
Mr. Rankin.
Did he tell you what he said to them in that regard?
Mrs. Oswald.
He told me that he had answered no.
Mr. Rankin.
After this interview by the FBI agents, do you recall any later interview with them and yourself or your husband before you went to New Orleans?
Mrs. Oswald.
No, there were no other interviews.
The next time was in Irving, when I lived with Mrs. Paine. But that is after I returned from New Orleans.
Mr. Rankin.
At New Orleans, who did your husband work for?
Mrs. Oswald.
He worked for the Louisiana Coffee Co. But I don't know in what capacity. I don't think that this was very good job, or perhaps more correctly, he did not---I know that he didn't like this job.
Mr. Rankin.
Do you know what he received in pay from that job?
Mrs. Oswald.
$1.35 an hour, I think. I am not sure.
Mr. Rankin.
How long did he work for this coffee company?
Mrs. Oswald.
I think it was from May until August, to the end of August.
Mr. Rankin.
Was he discharged?
Mrs. Oswald.
Yes.
Mr. Rankin.
And then was he unemployed for a time?
Mrs. Oswald.
Yes.
Mr. Rankin.
After you had discussed with your husband your going to Russia, was anything done about that?
Mrs. Oswald.
Yes, I wrote a letter to the Soviet Embassy with a request to be permitted to return. And then it seems to me after I was already in New Orleans, I wrote another letter in which I told the Embassy that my husband wants to return with me.
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