Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. Nothing at all.
Mr.Jenner.Now——
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. I don't even know when they came.
Mr.Jenner. Had you heard anything about them at all, that he had been in Russia?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. Before?
Mr.Jenner. Before, and then had married her, and come back, he attempted to defect?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. No; nothing at all—in spite that it was in some press somewhere—I believe it was printed.
Mr.Jenner. But you didn't see it?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. Never saw it. Never had no idea.
Mr.Jenner. Had there been any discussion among you people, any of you—Bouhe, Clark, and Meller, Voshinins, Mamantov, Gravitis, Dymitruk,Raigorodsky——
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. That is a character—Dymitruk was also imported recently. I think after we were there.
Mr.Jenner. What do you mean imported?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. I mean he arrived—I call him imported. He was really a sad sack.
Mr.Jenner. He was the husband of Lydia Dymitruk?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. Yes.
Mr.Jenner. I will ask you about her.
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. But I know very little about them.
Mr.Jenner. It may be important to us that you don't. But the part I want to emphasize here is—if it is the truth—I don't want to put any words in your mouth—that you had no advance notice that either of these people were coming, and you knew nothing whatsoever about them, never heard anything?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. Absolutely.
Mr.Jenner. And was that generally true of all these people?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. From what we know; yes. I don't think anybody knew anything at all. All of a sudden they arrived on the horizon. And, actually, who discovered them for the first time, I don't even know that.
Mr.Jenner. All right.
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. I cannot even tell. I would like to know, myself, now, how it came about.
Mr.Jenner. They were brought to your attention?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. Yes.
Mr.Jenner. And your recollection is it was George Bouhe?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. My recollection is that he finally—we were sort of ashamed of ourselves that we still didn't meet her, and we still didn't do anything, you know, for that girl. So, finally—I don't remember how, but either we drove, or whether they brought her to us for the first time. That is how it happened.
Mr.Jenner. And this was in the late summer of 1962?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. Yes. And I told him, Bouhe, at that particular time, we were financially not very well off, and I could not contribute any money, but I had time and a car, and I could take the baby to the clinic, and I could take her with her teeth, and anything of that sort I would be glad to do.
Mr.Jenner. We might digress a moment. In the summer of 1962 you and your husband were not as financially affluent as you had been?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. Well, we were draining pretty well, because for a year we didn't make any money, on our trip.
Mr.Jenner. I am not criticizing. All I am doing is seeking the facts.
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. Yes, yes.
Mr.Jenner.Well——
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. Not enough to be charitable.
Mr.Jenner. By the way, your husband, he is a fine geologist and petroleum engineer. He is not a man who likes to concentrate on business, finances, is he?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. Well, I would say he is pretty good with money. I am the one—I made money too easily, so I squandered money. He doesn't. But you see I always had a steady income. He doesn't have a steady income. Hehas an assignment for 2 or 3 weeks, he has very good money for it, and then we never know when it is going to come in.
He may have within a year two or three fantastic things—go to Ghana, go somewhere else, and he makes quite a lot of money.
But then maybe a year that he has nothing at all coming in. So he learned when he has something to hold onto it.
Mr.Jenner. So there were periods when his financial situation was good, so he was high?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. Yes. That is how we took our trip, because we were very fortunate before our trip—he had an assignment in Ghana, and he made some money, and I was making very good money, so we thought we can afford it. Besides he almost lost his mind. We had to go on that trip.
Mr.Jenner. Then there were valleys, financially, in which you were not as affluent?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. Of course.
Mr.Jenner. But you folks were at no time wealthy people?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. Real wealthy, no.
Mr.Jenner. Youmade——
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. I could have been if I saved the money, but I didn't.
Mr.Jenner. You made a comfortable living, and that is about it?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. That is it.
Mr.Jenner. But at this particular time, you were not in a position to assist the Oswalds financially in any material sense?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. Exactly; none at all.
Mr.Jenner. But you were in a position that you could afford them time?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. Yes.
Mr.Jenner. And attention?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. Yes. Not them—actually with Marina, because we couldn't do much for Oswald—just talk to a couple of people about him, and maybe get him a job. But even the job he had—I don't know who got it—I think it was an agency that got him the job he had.
Mr.Jenner. At Leslie Welding?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. I don't know the name of the firm. He worked in a darkroom.
Mr.Jenner. That was later.
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. I don't even know the name of it.
Mr.Jenner. You are not clear in your mind, I take it, that when you first met the Oswalds; you don't know whether you went to their homeor——
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. I don't remember. I really don't remember. And, believe me, I had enough time to think about it. I was trying to remember every little detail that can be useful. I cannot still remember exactly how it came about—whether they were brought to our house. I don't think we drove and got them for the first time. Maybe we took them back, you know, to Fort Worth. It could be. I don't know.
Of course, they had the baby with them. They always had to bring the baby—couldn't leave the baby with anyone.
Mr.Jenner. But in due course you did enter their home in Fort Worth?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. I never entered their home in Fort Worth. George, I think, did once. George walked in, because Lee was asleep, I think, when we brought Marina—so he maybe walked in the house—because he went out to the door. I never did. They lived somewhere—there was a tremendous store, Montgomery Ward or something.
Mr.Jenner. Sears?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. No; I think it was Montgomery Ward. I don't remember. That is where they lived. It was a miserable-looking house. That is what I saw. A wooden building.
Mr.Jenner. You found them to be in destitute circumstances, did you?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. Well, I wouldn't say they were completely starving, but they were quite miserable—quite, quite miserable, you know. Even if they were not destitute, the personality that Lee had would make anybody miserable to live with.
Mr.Jenner. All right. Tell us about Lee Oswald.
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. What I think of the fellow?
Mr.Jenner. Your impressions of him, what you thought of him.
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. Disagreeable. He was very, very disagreeable, and disappointed. He is like a puppy dog that everybody kicked. And he was sort of withdrawn within himself. And his greatest objection was that people helped them too much, they were showering things on Marina. Marina had a hundred dresses given to her. The baby had a crib. My daughter didn't have it when I came to the United States, and I didn't have one-hundredth of what Marina had, because I didn't know anybody, and I didn't want to know anybody when I came over. I was in such circumstances. So, anyway, he objected to that lavish help, because Marina was throwing it into his face.
Mr.Jenner. She was?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. Absolutely—see people, how nice they are? And she is always telling me—the people are nice, giving all these things, and he is insulting them for it. He was offensive with the people. And I can understand why, and maybe I was the only one that understood him, while he was offensive, because that hurt him. He could never give her what the people were showering on her. So that was very difficult for him, no matter how hard he worked—and he worked very hard. He worked overtime, he used to come in at 11 o'clock, she said, at night, and when he come home, he started reading again. So he was not running around.
He didn't drink, he didn't smoke. He was just hard working, but a very difficult personality.
And usually offensive at people because people had an offensive attitude to him.
I don't think he was offensive for that, because of the things we did, he could have killed us.
Mr.Jenner. What did you do?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. Well, you see, he mistreated his wife physically. We saw her with a black eye once.
Mr.Jenner. And did you talk to him and to her about it?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. Yes; we did. I called him just like our own kids, and set them down, and I said, "Listen, you have to grow up, you cannot live like that. This is not a country that permits such things to happen. If you love each other, behave. If you cannot live with each other peacefully, without all this awful behavior, you should separate, and see, maybe you really don't love each other."
Marina was, of course, afraid she will be left all alone, if she separate from Oswald—what is she going to do? She doesn't know the language, she had nobody to turn to. I understand they didn't get along with Oswald's family.
Mr.Jenner. Now, this is what you learned in talking with them?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. Yes, yes; through them actually, by facing them.
Mr.Jenner. I want you to identify your sources of information.
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. Yes, yes.
Mr.Jenner. You learned through Marina and Oswald, also, that they didn't get along well withtheir——
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. I cannot say through them, because maybe people talked about it, you know. She couldn't live in her sister-in-law's home, they didn't get along. And I understand that later on somebody mentioned that the reason was that she was just too lazy. She slept in the morning.
Mr.Jenner. What was your impression?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. She is lazy. You see, there are people that actually are no good, but still they have something very nice about them, that you cannot really be furious with them or mad, you really can't. She is lazy, and I know it, because she stayed once overnight.
Mr.Jenner. Where? At your home?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. Yes; with the baby. And I tell you—if I stay with somebody overnight, I will jump up the first thing in the morning, see what I can do to help, knowing I will be doing everything.
She didn't. She slept. I actually had to waken her up. She did the same thing—she stayed in our daughter's home overnight. Because when her teethwere pulled, she was not in condition to go back. She was the same way—very lazy. And I just couldn't understand it—a young person. Maybe she was ill. We talked about it—maybe we have just too much energy. For a young girl to sleep late, and not to be active.
The proof of her laziness is that she didn't do much about learning English, in spite I gave her the records, and we gave her one of our little phonographs. I had beautiful records to learn English—I bought them in New York when I arrived.
Mr.Jenner. Is it that she was lazy that she didn't pursue learning English, or did Oswald object to her learning English?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. According to her Oswald objected, and he also told us himself that he wants to speak with her in Russian, because he doesn't want to forget Russian.
But then we got onto Oswald.
Mr.Jenner. Tell me about it now.
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. He didn't want to forget his Russian. That was his reason—not to let his wife learn English—because she was the only person he could speak Russian to.
Mr.Jenner. He could still speak Russian to her, even though she learned English, couldn't he?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. Of course, that is what we told him. We said, "You are crippling her, she has to learn English. She cannot live in this country without the language, she cannot do anything."
He was strange in many, many ways.
But he never appeared to be violent or anything. He was a little violent once, when we came to the point that we said we are taking your wife and child away. That is the only time he showed real nastiness.
Mr.Jenner. Please.
You reached the point where you and your husband took Marina and the child out of the home and away from Oswald against his objections.
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. Against his objections. Actually, we talked him into doing it peacefully.
Mr.Jenner. And where did you take Marina and June?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. We took Marina and June to the house of Meller.
Mr.Jenner. Anna Meller?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. Anna Meller, yes. Very poor people—they put the baby's crib right in the dining room and everything. That is how nice people were, trying to help her. That was supposed to be temporary until we find another place where she could live with somebody for 2 or 3 months. We were trying to put her with Ford, with Declan Ford's wife, because she had a big house, and she had a newborn baby. But she is not a very easygoing person. She refused. I was furious with her that she refused, because she really could take Marina very nicely.
And I believe finally she was talked into it, and she had Marina maybe for a little while with her. I don't know. I am not sure.
Mr.Jenner. In October or November?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. Maybe, yes. I don't even know.
Mr.Jenner. But why did you take Marina from the home?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. Because he was beating her, and we didn't think it was right. We thought that a separation for them—they will decide whether they really love each other, they cannot live without each other, or they forget about each other. But that was absolutely useless to continue to live the way they were.
In fact, Bouhe had the same idea, but he was afraid to do it. He was always afraid of Lee. Naturally, being a bachelor—perhaps, Bouhe's type of person is afraid of his own shadow—there are people like that.
Mr.Jenner. Well, he is an older man.
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. I think he saw a lot in his life, maybe.
Mr.Jenner. He is not a man of great physical stature, like your husband?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. That is it. Lots of things contribute to the personality.
Mr.Jenner. Now, Mrs. De Mohrenschildt, you had discussions with both Marina and Lee about their difficulties?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. Yes; we had them at the same time, in the same room.
Mr.Jenner. Now, what were the reasons that she advanced as to any—as to her dissatisfaction?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. What was the reasons what?
Mr.Jenner. What were the reasons she said why she was dissatisfied with him?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. Oh, there was quite a few reasons. And I tell you—it was strange for me to hear from a young girl like that to speak so, how you say it—so boldy, about sex, for instance. I was shocked by it, you know—because in my times, even I was twice as old as she.
Mr.Jenner. Will you please tell me what she said?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. Well, she said her husband doesn't satisfy her. She just—and he is just too busy with his things, he doesn't pay enough attention to her.
Mr.Jenner. That was one reason?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. That is one of the main reasons, yes.
And the second reason, he was cruel with her—for instance, she likes to smoke, and he would forbid her to smoke. Any little argument or something—like once something—she didn't fill his bathtub, he beat her for it. And, also, he didn't like for her to have a drink of wine. She liked wine very much. She wasn't a drunk or anything, but she likes to drink wine. And he would object to that, too. And that was their main disagreements.
And then with the baby, he was absolutely fanatical about the child. He loved that child. You should see him looking at the child, he just changed completely. He thought that she was not too good with the child. The child was already spoiled to no end. Every time the child makes a noise, she picked it up. If she is not there in a second to pick the child up, Lee is after her—why is the baby crying? And the baby is extremely difficult, because it doesn't know anybody but her or Lee. Nobody could pick her up. And she is constantly with her. She had the child with her all the time, from our observations. She just couldn't take it. It was very, very difficult. And still at the same time, she didn't do much to free herself from it.
Mr.Jenner. What were Marina's personal habits? Was she clean and neat? Did she keep her home clean and neat? Or did her laziness spill over into those areas?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. Well, it was halfway, because it seems to be neat, and still not very—she was not a woman to arrange the home or make a home. I don't think so. And I don't know enough about it, because they had so few things, and they were so poor. So what can you make a home out of, nothing. You cannot really judge. You cannot. I am sure if she has things to do it with, I am sure she will.
At that particular time, she could not. She didn't have enough things to make a home. The apartments they were living in in Dallas were miserable, very, very poor.
Mr.Jenner. Give me your opinionof——
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. One thing I want to tell you.
When they were planning to move in Dallas, from Fort Worth, when I took her—the baby to the clinic, I was trying to find for them a little apartment somewhere closer to us, within the same area, University Park, or somewhere, knowing that I cannot race every time she needs something with the car to help them.
Lee insisted for some particular reason to live very, very far from everybody, from all these people. They lived in Oak Cliff—God knows where from us. Maybe he didn't want it because he didn't want other people to put their nose in his home. I don't think he had anything against us because we were with Marina. But I don't think he liked very much that Bouhe was showering her with things, and the other people give her so many things. Maybe that is why.
Why did he live so far?
We were very mad about it, too.
I said, "For God sakes, if we are to help them, I cannot race to Oak Cliff to help them with this or that"—if she had to go to the doctor. Why wouldn't they take a little place near us, it will be much easier for me to help her.
He had some reasons to live far away.
I don't know if anybody else mentioned that to you. That was everybody's impression. For some particular reason, he moved all the way out.
Mr.Jenner. Tell me of her personality.
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. I think I told you as much as I can. At the same time, in spite she is lazy—well, it is her upbringing, that is the way she was brought up. But she was a very, very pleasant girl. And she loved life, and she loved the United States, absolutely. We would drive on the streets, she would just—oh, that is the United States.
That is maybe why I like her, because she give me the impression she felt like I felt when I came in. She said she was always dreaming to come to the United States. She looked at those pictures with big, big houses and everything.
Did I tell you how she met Oswald, according to her?
Mr.Jenner. What did she say?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. It was in the town of Minsk. There was some kind of apartment houses, supposed to be very, very good. And she saw that house and thought, "How wonderful if I just go there to visit in that apartment house."
And Lee happened to be living there. And I think Lee was sick. And she sort of nursed him out, or something like that. That is how they met.
And I don't know—but it is very possible that she was very much influential in making them come back.
Mr.Jenner. Come to the United States?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. Come to the United States.
Mr.Jenner. That was the impression you obtained from her?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. Yes, yes.
On the other hand, he was also disappointed. He wasn't as excited as he was when he went over there, from the impressions we get from him.
Mr.Jenner. From your contacts with him, you had the impression he had been disappointed in Russia?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. I asked him, "Why did you come back, if you were such a brave big hero and you threw the passport?"
And as she told me, "In the American Ambassador's face in Moscow."
He said, "Here is your passport, now I am going to be a Soviet citizen."
And I said, "How come you are back?"
He said, "I didn't find what I was looking for."
Mr.Jenner. Oswald said that?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. That was Oswald's answer. "I didn't find what I was looking for."
So, to me, the answer was the stupid kid decided to be obnoxious, and thinking he was a big hero went over there, and learned the hard way, burned himself, and decided to come back, and our Government was wonderful to help him at the time. And he was very conscientious about paying the debt, very conscientious. He paid it back, I think, the first thing, out of the first salary, in spite how hard it was for them to live. Those are the things.
And I don't know of anybody saying anything good about him. And that made me a little mad. Nobody said anything good about him. He had a lot of good qualities. He had a lot of terrible qualities, but certainly to compare him with that horrible Ruby—Oswald had a lot of good qualities. And if people would be kinder to him, maybe, you know—maybe he wouldn't be driven to be so, and wouldn't do anything like that. I don't know whether he did or not, anyway. But he would not be involved in it.
But I have the impression that he was just pushed, pushed, pushed, and she was probably nagging, nagging, nagging.
Mr.Jenner. You found her to be a nagger?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. Yes; oh, yes; she ribbed him even in front of us.
Mr.Jenner. She did?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. She did. She ribbed him so, that if I would ever speak to my husband that way we would not last long. I would not do it. Because I couldsee——
Mr.Jenner. What did she say? Yousee——
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. Oh, big hero, or look at that big shot, something like that.
Mr.Jenner. When you say she ribbed him in front of us, that doesn't mean anything to us. That is a conclusion.
What did she say to him?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. Let me try to remember exactly. Don't forget, I am telling right now impressions. It is very difficult to remember exact words. But certain things led to leave that impression in my mind.
Mr.Jenner. Mrs. De Mohrenschildt, it happens that you and George, having the time, having the inclination, being the kind of people you are, you saw more of the Oswalds than anybody else.
And what I am trying to do is to obtain from you, not only your impressions, but how you came by them.
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. Yes. But what I want to tell you—I don't think it is correct. We didn't see them more than anybody else. In fact, we saw them maybe less, because she never lived with us—she stayed once overnight. And they have been very, very seldom at our house, very, very seldom. I cannot exactly tell how many times. But you can count it on your fingers how many times. And usually it was when finally I find the time and I said come over and I will make dinner for you, or something like that, because I knew they were not eating very well.
He didn't care for it at all, but she did. She liked to eat well, and good things. So that was the only occasion we saw them.
So I think other people saw them even more. For instance, the people that she lived with, absolutely, because he used to come and visit her.
Mr.Jenner. Well, you were more direct with her and with him, you and your husband, because primarily his disposition is to speak his mind, and Oswald respected your husband.
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. He did. He respected him, and he respected me. And maybe that is what makes the difference with the rest of the crowd. He never was respectful. Once, as I said, he was a little—showed a little violence, and he said he will break all the baby's toys and tear her dresses if we take her away from him.
I said, "Lee, where will that get you? If you really love Marina that is the last thing you should do, then you lose her forever." And he sort of boiled and boiled. He sat quietly, you know. And he said, all right, he would not do it.
Mr.Jenner. Now, I asked you as to the sources of difficulty, and you related them. Did she twit him about his inability to make enough money so that she could live better?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. Yes. That was one complaint. Another complaint, sexwise, he wasn't satisfactory for her. In fact, she was almost sick that she wasn't getting enough sex, which I never heard of before, I didn't know such things can happen to people, you know.
We saw, ourselves, he was a little difficult—for instance, with the baby. I also objected that he didn't let her smoke. After all, she is supposed to be a grown woman. He was definitely domineering—it has to be just like he said and that is it. He always had a feeling that he is the boss, and she has to—just nothing, just wipe the floor with her. This man. So we objected to that.
Mr.Jenner. Now, you were going to tell me the basis on which you formed your opinion as to her, you say, nagging. You used the term "ribbing." This was not jocular, was it—not joking? It was irritating?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. It was irritating. That he was a big shot, reading, reading, reading.
Mr.Jenner. Would say that in your presence?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. Yes.
Mr.Jenner. She would ridicule him, in other words?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. Yes, in a way, yes. She said things that will hurt men's pride. That definitely was.
Mr.Jenner. Try and recall more of that.
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. I am trying to think what else she said. Also, she objected violently that he was rude to the people that helped her. That was very important. Because—and I know—I told you the reasons why he objected to that, which are understandable, also.
But still, on the other hand, for instance, one incident was—I remember the Clarks invited them for dinner, and Lee answered the phone, and he said, when they invited him for dinner, we have other plans. He probably didn't want to go there. That is all it was. But you don't talk like that to people. So Marina objected to that. She told that to me.
There were several other occasions similar to that. For instance, he could not stand George Bouhe. He just could not stand him. And, in a way, I don't blame him. I can't stand him, either—that type of a person. He is okay, he is supposed to be a friend. But I don't like that type of personality. He absolutely could not stand him.
You know, some people do charity, and they expect for you to kiss their hands for it. And some people do charity, and they are very glad to do it and forget about it, don't expect anything. This is the kind of charity I believe in. Bouhe likes to help, and then he keeps those people like slaves, he is a little king, and they do anything for him after that. But Oswald didn't.
And that is why there was tremendous antagonism there. Bouhe asked Marina never to come to his house at all, because he was afraid that Oswald will follow her and will cause him a scandal, or God knows what. He was that kind of person. I think that was the main thing, that Oswald was rude to people helping him.
Mr.Jenner. Did Oswald ever talk about his political views in your presence?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. In which way? Overall political, or any particular incidents?
Mr.Jenner. Politics with a capital P. His views on government.
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. I think definitely he was a Marxist, ideologist Marxist. I don't think he was a Communist from the way I would understand a Communist. We didn't know if he did or he didn't belong to any party at all. I don't think he even belonged to a party in Russia, because that was—oh, this is very important.
His objection—the things that he didn't like in Russia was those horrible meetings, constant meetings, party meetings. He said that you have to work, and you have to go to those meetings—they drive people crazy, those party meetings, worker meetings. They have to go and listen to speeches and bla, bla, bla. So I don't think he was—according to that, I don't think he was interested in a party, or belonging to anything.
It was a complete surprise to us when we learned after all this that he was actually involved in doing something for Castro, selling leaflets or something, in New Orleans.
Mr.Jenner. Passing them out?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. Absolutely. Because we neverhad——
Mr.Jenner. You were in Haiti by that time?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. Oh, yes; we saw them last time Easter, 1963.
Mr.Jenner. Now, something occurred in Easter, 1963 when you went to visit them?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. Yes.
Mr.Jenner. Was this Easter Sunday or the day after?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. No, to my best recollection it was Saturday before Easter. By the way, the first time they talked to us about it, I completely mixed all the dates. I thought it was in the fall. But it was the day I remember when we come over with the big pink rabbit for the baby.
Mr.Jenner. Did you arrive there during the day?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. No; it was in the evening. I think we were playing tennis, and then we were somewhere, and then I decided we will be busy tomorrow, and I wanted to take the rabbit to the baby.
And we came over late at night. It was 10 o'clock, or maybe later. And I remember they gave us something to drink.
Mr.Jenner. You arrived there. Were they—had they retired for the night?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. I think they were halfway in bed already, because the house was dark. I remember we banged on the door. It was dark.
Mr.Jenner. And Lee came to the door?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. I don't remember who came to the door, Marina or Lee.
Mr.Jenner. They turned the light on. And where were they living then?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. That was their last apartment—not Elsbeth, but the other one. I have the address, Elsbeth address. But the other address I don't have. It is just around the corner.
Mr.Jenner. 214?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. I don't know the address.
Mr.Jenner. Was it upstairs or downstairs?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. Upstairs. There was a little terrace, and a big tree growing right next to the terrace.
Mr.Jenner. Had you been there before?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. No.
Mr.Jenner. That is the first time you had ever been there?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. I don't remember. Maybe I was. I don't think so.
Mr.Jenner. All right.
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. I don't think so.
Mr.Jenner. You got there. Now, justrelax——
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. I am trying to think hard, because every little fact could be important.
Mr.Jenner. But you are excited. Relax, and tell me everything that occurred, chronologically, as best you can on that occasion. You came to the door and either Marina or Oswald came to the door, and you and your husband went in the home?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. That is right.
Mr.Jenner. Then, go on. Tell me about it.
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. And I believe from what I remember George sat down on the sofa and started talking to Lee, and Marina was showing me the house—that is why I said it looks like it was the first time, because why would she show me the house if I had been there before? Then we went to another room, and she opens the closet, and I see the gun standing there. I said, what is the gun doing over there?
Mr.Jenner. Yousay——
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. A rifle.
Mr.Jenner. A rifle, in the closet?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. In the closet, right in the beginning. It wasn't hidden or anything.
Mr.Jenner. Standing up on its butt?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. Yes.
Mr.Jenner. I show you Commission Exhibit 139. Is that the rifle that you saw?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. It looks very much like it.
Mr.Jenner. And was it standing in the corner of the closet?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. You want me to show you how it was leaning? Make believe I open the closet door this way. And the rifle was leaning something like that.
Mr.Jenner. Right against the wall?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. Yes; and the closet was square. I said, what is this?
Mr.Jenner. It was this rifle?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. I don't know. It looks very much like it, because something was dangling over it, and I didn't know what it was. This telescopic sight. Like we had a rifle with us on the road, we just had a smooth thing, nothing attached to it. And I saw something here.
Mr.Jenner. I say your attention was arrested, not only, because when thecloset door was opened by Marina you saw the rifle in the closet—you saw a rifle?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. Yes.
Mr.Jenner. That surprised you, first?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. Of course.
Mr.Jenner. And then other things that arrested your attention, as I gather from what you said, is that you saw a telescopic sight?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. Yes; but I didn't know what it was.
Mr.Jenner. But your attention was arrested by that fact, because it was something new and strange to you?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. Yes.
Mr.Jenner. You were accustomed to your husband having weapons?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. Well, we had only one rifle on our trip. But my father was a collector of guns, that was his hobby.
Mr.Jenner. And being accustomed to rifles, to the extent you have indicated, you noticed this telescopic lens, because you had not seen a rifle with a telescopic lens on it before? Had you seen a rifle with the bolt action that this has?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. No; I didn't ever know. I read it was bolt action, but I would not know.
Mr.Jenner. But you did notice this protrusion, the ball sticking out?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. No; I don't recall. The only thing there was something on it. It could be that it was the telescopic sight or something, but it was something on the rifle. It was not a smooth, plain rifle. This is for sure.
Mr.Jenner. Now, when you saw that, and being surprised, were you concerned about it?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. I just asked what on earth is he doing with a rifle?
Mr.Jenner. What did she say?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. She said, "Oh, he just loves to shoot." I said, "Where on earth does he shoot? Where can he shoot?" When they lived in a little house. "Oh, he goes in the park and he shoots at leaves and things like that." But it didn't strike me too funny, because I personally love skeet shooting. I never kill anything. But I adore to shoot at a target, target shooting.
Mr.Jenner. Skeet?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. I just love it.
Mr.Jenner. Didn't you think it was strange to have someone say he is going in a public park and shooting leaves?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. But he was taking the baby out. He goes with her, and that was his amusement.
Mr.Jenner. Did she say that?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. Yes; that was his amusement, practicing in the park, shooting leaves. That wasn't strange to me, because any time I go to an amusement park I go to the rifles and start shooting. So I didn't find anything strange.
Mr.Jenner. But you shot a rifle at the rifle range in these amusement parks?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. Yes.
Mr.Jenner. Little .22?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. I don't know what it was.
Mr.Jenner. Didn't you think it was strange that a man would be walking around a public park in Dallas with a high-powered rifle like this, shooting leaves?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. I don't know it was a high-powered rifle. I had no idea. I don't even know right now. Is it a high-powered rifle? Or just a regular one-bullet rifle, isn't it?
Mr.Jenner. It is a one-bullet rifle, but it is a pretty powerful one.
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. I didn't know that. What caliber is it?
Mr.Jenner. 6.5.
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. That I don't understand. We had 16—shotgun with us.
Mr.Jenner. Had anything been said up to this point in your acquaintance with the Oswalds of his having had a rifle, or a shotgun, in Russia?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. No.
Mr.Jenner. No discussion of any hunting in Russia?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. In fact, we never even knew that he was a sharpshooter or something. We never knew about it.
Mr.Jenner. No discussion of that?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. No discussion at all. She just said, we are so short of money, and this crazy lunatic buys a rifle. This is what she told me. And you know what happened after that.
Mr.Jenner. Please. Tell me everything she said on this occasion.
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. I think the most important thing is, that crazy lunatic bought a rifle when we really need money for other things.
Mr.Jenner. And she also said he took it out in the park and was shooting it?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. Something like that; yes.
Mr.Jenner. All right. Now, then, what did you do? Go into some other part of the house?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. It wasn't very much. I believe it was only two rooms. And then I returned back, and told George—do you know what they have in the closet? I came back to the room, where George and Lee were sitting and talking. I said, do you know what they have in the closet? A rifle. And started to laugh about it. And George, of course, with his sense of humor—Walker was shot at a few days ago, within that time. He said, "Did you take a pot shot at Walker by any chance?" And we started laughing our heads off, big joke, big George's joke. And later on, according to the newspapers, he admitted that he shot at Walker.
Mr.Jenner. Now, when George made that remark in the presence of Lee Oswald, "Did you take a pot shot at Walker?" Did you notice anychange——
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. We were not looking for any. I wish I would know.
Mr.Jenner. Please—I want only your reaction. Your husband has told me his. You noticed nothing?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. I didn't notice anything.
Mr.Jenner. Were you looking to see whether he had a change of expression?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. No; none at all. It was just a joke.
Mr.Jenner. As far as you were concerned, it was a joke?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. Sure.
Mr.Jenner. But you did not look at him to see if he reacted?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. No; I didn't take it seriously enough to look at him.
Mr.Jenner. You didn't?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. I didn't.
Mr.Jenner. How long did you remain after that at their home?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. Not very long. I think we went on the terrace. And I don't even remember whether we had a drink, a soft drink, or not. And we left. She got me some roses. They had a big rose tree right by the staircase. And she got me a lot of roses, and we went home. The baby was asleep.
Mr.Jenner. Did you see the Oswalds on any subsequent occasion?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. No.
Mr.Jenner. Never saw them?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. I don't remember. I don't think so. What day was Easter, by the way? Do you remember—1963?
Mr.Jenner. No; I don't.
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. Because the 19th of April, we left.
Mr.Jenner. You left for New York on the 19th of April?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. Nineteenth, from what I recall. I think so.
Mr.Jenner. I think Easter was late that year, but I am not certain. In any event, it was the day before Easter?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. I believe so; yes. The night before Easter.
Mr.Jenner. When you left for New York, you were in New York a few weeks, a couple of weeks?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. We spent about 6 weeks between New York, Washington, Philadelphia.
Mr.Jenner. And you returned to Dallas in May?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. End of May.
Mr.Jenner. Did you call the Oswalds?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. No; we didn't. We heard that they were already gone. I wanted to see them before we went to Haiti. But I understood that they were gone, or they were going. I had no time. So we didn't get in touch with them. But we had a card from them from New Orleans, with their address. But I don't think we ever wrote to them. I don't remember writing. We were going to send them a Christmas card.
Mr.Jenner. Now, do you recall an occasion in February of 1963 when there was a gathering in the evening at the home of, or apartment of Everett Glover?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. Yes.
Mr.Jenner. Did you and your husband take part in that?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. Yes; we were showing our movies to Everett's friends.
Mr.Jenner. How did that party come about?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. Well, you know, we have this quite unusual film, and quite a few people interested to see it. And, in fact, we showed that film—the film so many times, at clubs and gatherings. And he had still quite a few friends that wanted to see it, and we had a couple of friends. So we decided to have it. And then he mentioned he knew a woman, Ruth Paine.
Mr.Jenner. You are talking about Glover?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. Yes; and he said that would be very nice. I was sort of looking for American couples to introduce Lee and Marina to American people—not to Russian refugees—to get her out of that. So he mentioned that it would be very nice for Marina to meet this girl, and it was. She was a young woman, she was interested in Russian.
Mr.Jenner. What was her name?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. Ruth Paine. And that we thought was very good, because she could help Marina in English and Marina would help her in Russian, that it would work very well. From what I understand later on from the papers, she did help a lot, Marina. She did a lot for her.
Mr.Jenner. Did you talk to Marina about this in advance?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. I don't remember. I think maybe I did. I don't remember. I really don't remember.
Mr.Jenner. A few weeks before this, Marina and Lee had visited in your home, isn't that correct?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. Very possible, very possible. I don't remember.
Mr.Jenner. Had you known Ruth Paine at all prior to this time?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. Met her the first time that evening, and we liked her very much, because she is an outgoing, warm, and wonderful person. I thought that would be terrific for Marina to be close to somebody because I didn't have time. I just couldn't, and I don't have any patience. When I see somebody is clicking right away I respond to advice, but she wasn't, you know. She was too slow, and we have too much problems with our own children.
Mr.Jenner. Who is too slow?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. Marina. We had too many problems with our own children, and I was just tired of it, you know. After all, she was not my child. I did everything I could, so let somebody else take over and do something else because I was too busy, and we were planning this trip. George—through next month to Haiti actually to seal this contract. We had our heads busy with other things.
Mr.Jenner. What occurred during that evening? The movie was shown?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. We just showed the movie and discussed it, and the people asked different questions, peculiar questions about the life of Indians—or——
Mr.Jenner. About your trip?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. About our trip, and that was all.
Mr.Jenner. Weren't these people interested in Marina and Oswald?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. Some were.
Mr.Jenner. Who was present?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. From what I recall at that particular time, it was just Ruth Paine that we noticed was the most interested in her. I don't even remember who was there besides. I don't remember who was there.
There were some young people from a mobile research laboratory that worked with Everett.
Mr.Jenner. From Everett Glover's place?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. Yes; there were people there. I do believe, I think we invited the person that owned the apartment house. This time we showed movies twice at Everett's house, I believe. I think we showed it twice, and we invited the people that own the apartment house because they were interested in that.
Mr.Jenner. What are their names?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. I don't remember. She is teaching in a university, in Dallas University now. They like to travel a lot, too. I am sure you can get the name, the list of names of people from Everett.
Mr.Jenner. Did Lee have a good time at this party, or meeting?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. I don't know, because it was always dark when the movies were shown, so I wasn't observing anybody.
Mr.Jenner. Did you bring Lee and Marina to the party?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. I don't believe so. I think somebody else got them, because I think we had people, out of town guests, and in fact we came in very late, I think. We arrived quite late that day.
Mr.Jenner. You arrived at the party late?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. Yes; once we were late. I forgot which showing it was. We had a couple of people out of town. We invited them for dinner, and then we brought them over.
Mr.Jenner. That was the only purpose of the meeting that you have indicated?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. The only purpose of?
Mr.Jenner. The meeting, the only purpose was the one you have indicated?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. Oh, yes.
Mr.Jenner. Did you attend a combination Christmas and New Year's party in December of 1963 at the Fords?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. I don't know the date.
Mr.Jenner. 1963.
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. I don't know the date, but there was a party, and we attended it.
Mr.Jenner. Please, when you say you don't know the dates, was it in December? Was it in the holiday period?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. It was in the holiday period, but was it December or was it early January, I don't remember.
Mr.Jenner. And who was at that party?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. There were quite a lot of people from this Russian colony and among them there was a little Japanese girl. Do you know about Yaeko?
Mr.Jenner. Y-a-e-k-o?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. That is right.
Mr.Jenner. Did you know Yaeko before?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. Yes; we knew Yaeko before.
Mr.Jenner. What was her last name?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. I don't remember her last name because we always called her Yaeko.
Mr.Jenner. Where was she working?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. I don't know whether she was working at the time or not, but she was imported by some American family. She came with the family. She is supposed to be from a very fine Japanese family. She was wealthy. It was strange she worked almost as a servant in some family. I know she had only one day off, because I remember when we wanted to invite her it was only one day, Thursday, that we could invite her. Then she did some work with Neiman Marcus.
Mr.Jenner. Neiman Marcus?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. Then she was a musician. She played the Japanese special long, long instrument, and she was playing with the Dallas Symphony, and she was also playing at exhibits, Neiman Marcus gives exhibits, you know, oriental exhibits, whatever it was, that fall, and she was participating in it.That is what we know about Yaeko. But then we heard that she was in New York.
To tell you frankly I never trusted Yaeko. I thought there was something fishy, maybe because I was brought up with Japanese, you know, and I knew what treachery it is, you know. I just somehow—she was very pleasant, but was very strange to me the way she was floating around, you know, and everything. There is another strange thing happened, too, with that Yaeko.
Mr.Jenner. Involving the Oswalds?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. Yes.
Mr.Jenner. Tell us.
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. That was very funny because they practically spent all evening together at that party, and Marina was furious, of course, about it. And the party that brought Yoico to the party was furious about it, too, and I don't blame him for it. And from what I understand, Marina told me that Oswald saw Yaeko after, which was very unusual, because I don't think Oswald wanted to see anyone, let's put it that way. He would rather just sit by himself and—locked in a house, not to see anyone. And, in fact, Marina was jealous of it, from Yaeko. She was the only person we know that Oswald really liked.
Mr.Jenner. Can you recall the names of the family with whom Yaeko—by whom Yaeko was employed?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. No; but I can find out very easily.
Mr.Jenner. How?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. Through Dallas. They know the people that actually introduced Yaeko. It will be Henry Rogatz who knows Yaeko very well.
Mr.Jenner. Spell that, please.
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. Two people who can give you everything about Yoico because they have been carrying on helping her all the time. Henry Rogatz, alsoin——
Mr.Jenner. Henry Rogatz, R-o-g-a-t-z, and Lev Aronson, A-r-o-n-s-o-n?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. Yes; and I believe I have Lev's address in my phone book, if I need it. I can phone you. I don't know if we have Henry's address now. They are both very nice people, charming people.
Mr.Jenner. Would you do this. Call my hotel, The Madison?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. Call later on?
Mr.Jenner. And leave a message at my hotel as to Mr. Aronson's address and telephone number, if you have it?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. Yes; and maybe we have Henry's address. Maybe somebody sent it to us because we asked. We didn't have it with us when we left. We just moved. Voshinin liked Yaeko.
Mr.Jenner. Voshinin?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. Yes; but I think Henry can tell you much more than anybody.
Mr.Jenner. How, otherwise, did Oswald act at this Christmas party. He paid a great deal of attention, apparently,to——
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. Yes; they talk, talk, talk, talk, talk.
Mr.Jenner. To the Japanese girl?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. Yes; what did they talk about, I don't have the slightest idea. But everybody remarked and we were laughing about it. We were teasing Marina how he had a little Japanese girl now, you now. That was just as fun, of course, you know. But evidently they not only talked because she said he saw her later and he liked her. That is what she told me. He really liked Yaeko.
Mr.Jenner. Did you bring the Oswalds to the party?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. I think we brought them. In fact, I had a fight almost to get them to that party because Cathy didn't want them and we weren't giving any parties. We gave a big party before, and I wanted Marina to be at some Christmas party because it was her first Christmas in the United States, she could have some kind of fun, so I talked her into it finally. She objected, because she could not bring the baby because the baby would wake up.
I said okay, I'm going to leave the baby with somebody else. So I have another friend which I talked into babysitting for the baby. So we went,we got there, and we left the baby with the friend and then we took them to the party, and then we went back to the friend, picked up the baby. It was midnight or whatever it was, and took them back.
Mr.Jenner. Earlier in raising this Christmas party matter with you, Mrs. De Mohrenschildt, I stated that it was in December of 1963. That was a slip of the tongue, and it was in December of 1962, because in December of 1963 you were in Haiti.
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. It was after this.
Mr.Jenner. Of course, it couldn't be December of 1963.
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. He was dead already.
Mr.Jenner. By that time, he was not alive. You took the Oswalds home that evening?
Mrs.De Mohrenschildt. I believe we did. We just had to, because we had to go pick up the baby. The baby was crying all evening. That poor woman was up with her all the time. It was just impossible, that baby was so spoiled, all the time with her, with her mother, or with Lee, because so few people came to see them. They lived like mice, you know. That is why we were so sorry for them.
I wanted for them to meet American couples to get out of it. We tried to get Marina friendly with George's daughter because she had a little boy, too.