Warren Commission | Media Library | Articles | FAQ | Links | Feedback | Contact | About |
The John F. Kennedy Assassination Homepage |
Navigation
Volumes
|
(Testimony of Marilyn Dorothea Murret)Miss MURRET. Of course, and they had three children, and I mean it was in Stars and Stripes. Miss MURRET. Yes. Miss MURRET. No, sir. Miss MURRET. The only thing he said was--I just didn't know any of this would happen, and I didn't know he would be leaving and I thought that he would say what he wanted to say, because I don't believe in bombarding somebody with questions, I really don't, and what they want to say, they say, and what they don't want to say, they don't say. So, anyway, he said that he had better quarters than the average person because he was an American, and they wanted to create a good impression on him. Other than about the family and showing me a few photographs, that is all he said. And he said that he had met Marina at this dance, and he worked in the factory. Miss MURRET. No; he didn't. Miss MURRET. No. Miss MURRET. No; maybe he did, but I wouldn't know what it was, anyway. Miss MURRET. Well, just that he said, and I don't know where he was going or where he was when he said it, that these people let him spend the night there and that they had less than he had. So if that was on the outskirts, or where it was, I don't really know. Miss MURRET. No. Miss MURRET. I studied French and Spanish, but was hopeless. Miss MURRET. No sir; he didn't say anything at all about any kind of training. When he first came out, I couldn't understand how he had gotten out, in the first place. Miss MURRET. With a Russian wife, and he did say her father was---was he a Russian officer? Anyway---- Miss MURRET. He was, or she might have said that in her broken English, so I couldn't conceive of how they had gotten out of Russia, and how he had access to Russia, I mean to work there, et cetera, and then just to be allowed to leave, with a Russian wife, and her father being in the Army. And I think that she had an uncle--I don't know--but I think it was in the papers, or in some magazine recently that he is with the Intelligence Service in Russia. Miss MURRET. Yes; he, supposedly, was the one who helped him to get out. So, that I couldn't figure out. Miss MURRET. Yes; and he said he'd had a tough time. That is about the only thing I did ask him, and he said he'd had a very difficult time getting out, and he had to wait for a particular length of time until everything went through, and he knew that since, or if he had not had a wife, he could have gotten out sooner, but he had to wait on her papers, and by that time they'd had
|
Found a Typo?Click here |
Copyright by www.jfk-assassination.com | Last Update: Wed, 3 Aug 2016 21:56:33 CET |