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Warren Commission Hearings: Vol. IV - Page 438« Previous | Next »

(Testimony of John Lester Quigley)

Mr. Stern.
Did you check your office----
Mr. Quigley.
I did chock our files and I determined that we had an investigation currently underway with regard to Oswald. I knew it was assigned to an agent in the New Orleans office who sat right in front of me. So I, on Monday morning, I discussed the fact that I had interviewed Oswald at the first district jail on Saturday morning.
Mr. Stern.
Do you recall what you told him about the case other than the. details? Did you think Oswald was worthy of further investigation?
Mr. Quigley.
Well, sir, this was not my decision. I was merely recording the results of an interview. I had nothing to do with the actual investigation of this particular matter.
Mr. Stern.
Did you think he was behaving rationally or irrationally?
Mr. Quigley.
I would say he was acting rationally. You are speaking of the time I interviewed him?
Mr. Stern.
Yes.
Mr. Quigley.
Rationally.
Mr. Stern.
Were you concerned at all by the fact that he had requested this interview, volunteered for it after his arrest in connection with Fair Play for Cuba Committee activity and thereafter was misleading and reluctant to talk to you about these activities? Didn't you think it was strange?
Mr. Quigley.
No, sir; I just thought this was a normal situation that has occurred many times of persons in custody of the police wish to talk to an FBI agent. We have them come to our headquarters in New Orleans all the time to talk to us. So I didn't consider this unusual at all.
Mr. Stern.
Would it be usual or had it occurred before that someone would ask for an interview and then refuse to respond to your questions. Didn't that seem strange?
Mr. Quigley.
Not necessarily; not necessarily. Frequently people will have a problem and want to talk to an FBI agent and they want to tell them what their problem is, but then when you start probing into it then they don't want to talk to you. I think that is just human nature. If you are probing too deep it gets a little touchy.
Mr. Dulles.
Who was in charge of this other investigation from the FBI office with regard to Lee Harvey Oswald that you found out about later, was this Special Agent Milton R. Kaack?
Mr. Quigley.
Yes, sir.
Mr. Dulles.
Did you make your report to him, did you?
Mr. Quigley.
Orally, yes; I discussed it with him.
Mr. Dulles.
When it was sent forward was it sent forward with these documents we have in Exhibit 826 of which your report forms pages 6 through 10?
Mr. Quigley.
Yes, sir; this was prepared--that is correct--this was then prepared and transcribed. But I had discussed the matter or discussed the fact that I had interviewed him.
Mr. Dulles.
Was Special Agent Kaack your superior or just happened to be in charge of this particular subject?
Mr. Quigley.
No; this investigative matter was assigned to him.
Mr. Dulles.
I see. He was the one then who forwarded the report to Washington, this report we have, Exhibit 826?
Mr. Quigley.
He is the one who prepared it; yes, sir.
Mr. Dulles.
And included verbatim your memorandum in this report?
Mr. Quigley.
Yes, sir.
Mr. Dulles.
Pages 7 to 10.
Mr. Quigley.
Yes, sir.
The Chairman.
Six to ten.
Mr. Stern.
Have you found subsequent to this interview, Mr. Quigley, that you had any other contact with the case of Lee Harvey Oswald before this interview?
Mr. Quigley.
Yes; I discovered at the time I chocked our files that on April 18, 1961, I had; as a result of a request of the Dallas office, chocked the office of naval intelligence records at the U.S. Naval Station at Algiers. My purpose in checking that was merely to record what information their flies contained.
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