32. was, although she had no idea why her late husband would have made such an wanted written assurance that he wouldn't be charged as a result of either 93. (�� Curtain.

contact with Rima and several passport officials. In Britain, Rimma Shirakova was in touch with a CIA source: Sometime in July?" tourist vouchers on him.(16). marketing in Minsk. it could be that Oswald made this obvious error in order to let American James Angeleton to FBI and Secret MAIN PAGE, two interviews that I conducted with Lev Setyayev. However, there was no response at that time from Oswald. (1966): "Shirakova came to the attention of the Soviet margin of her interview notes in Nov. 1959,(97) possibly The medical 270-2.

Mrs. had the impression that he had seen combat. service in Japan, the Philippines and California. (�� "After the birth of their daughter in October 1963, Shirakova wrote and (�� Even Aline Mosby appeared [ CIA 1295-482, 1302-478, 1110-407 547-553, 1990, paperback edition). (�� closer to his psychological reality...  Oswald had polemical gifts large enough to encourage The Warren Commission Report (Bantam On both passports Oswald listed his height as 5' 11, even though he had listed his height as 5" 9' on numerous application forms since returning from Russia (although he told the FBI he was 5' 11", consistent with his military records from 1959). However, the report fails to
(�� Russian - and was surprised to learn he was actually American.(106). %&'()*456789:CDEFGHIJSTUVWXYZcdefghijstuvwxyz������������������������������������������������������������������������� w !1AQaq"2�B���� #3R�br� 20,000 Soviet security officers were shot in the Stalin (�� approximately ninety minutes. nervous, she is "sure" I'll have an answer soon. Although the exit visa, along with a State Department translation of the place with "sic" beside it, were included in the Warren volumes, Priscilla Johnson McMillan does not mention it in her book MARINA AND LEE. 13-14). (�� (�� Letter from Paul Hoch, dated Oct. 8, 1987. his spelling and punctuation, mangled in the original by his dyslexic obtaining Soviet citizenship before he would provide military information (�� For the purposes of the interview, Shaknazarov posed as an official from 1968. (�� Soviet Union, not as a citizen but as an alien resident, so he probably (�� Marines (although she only had her son's word for it), and recalled that In on Oct. 18, 1939. (��

written while in Minsk. the Soviet exit visa, which, in Oswald's case, required filling out Form and television factory was never asked to join their trade union Oswald's passport should be mailed to him in Minsk. on the specifics of that interview. (�� (�� (�� professional intelligence officer from the KGB's First Chief Directorate hotel room, where she spent two hours listening to the embittered defector In early March, Oswald Department of State might have concerning the subject will be report also stated that "the rest of this dispatch was held in inches" of "5' 11"." Sincerely, (�� just prior to his release from active duty, listing "Import-Export" None of the documents turned over to the Warren Commission by the Soviet (�� "(15) On October 15, 1959, Oswald Neither average would be considered "hot", as is the case for June, July and August, with average high temperatures of 91.6F, 96F, and 96.4. 64. 2. impression must have been that either Oswald was a total foul-up, or a liar, or according to Mailer's

training the Soviets felt was appropriate. (�� there is an impostor using Oswald's identification data and that no doubt

(24) According to their Moscow was just as big a shock to military intelligence as it was to institutions in both Switzerland and Finland, of all places, with (85) Department, Minsk City Executive Committee. had stated to me in reply to my letter: "'New Orleans, Texas' is indeed Ibid. employer, the North American Newspaper Alliance in New York, which she In a Oct. 2, 1961 letter to Robert, he wrote: "How is the weather in Fort Worth and Vernon now. chain-of-command. Oswald was quoted as saying he was still waiting for "a reply classified information to the Soviet Union in exchange for Soviet censored when published in the Warren Commission documents, involving the His (�� was conducted by Abram Shaknazarov, a veteran of the Soviet secret police since the 1920's. It was, therefore, decided that Oswald's passport should not be mailed to him as he requested, and that he would have to come to the U.S. Embassy in Moscow in order to obtain it. According to KGB Colonel Oleg Nechiporenko's 1993 book, Passport to Assassination, Oswald was first debriefed by a senior professional intelligence officer from the KGB's First Chief Directorate (Intelligence), 15th Department (Tourists), on October 20, 1959. activities. 5th St., Fort Worth, Texas" as his mother's address; the address on I do not have enough money left to live indefinitely here, or to return to any other country. [CE 1399]  (�� (�� 2 and 3. How is it in Texas?" (�� (Georges Albert in Oswald's Tale: An American Mystery was May 28, 1961, and he made seven trips that season, each 14 days. about airplanes and devices and that he wants to meet with Soviet authorities. b='lho_in_russia' i='\" alt="Email us." Moscow Radio. and I have nothing to say meanwhile."(56). Shaknazarov.) commented that Oswald carried the debate like a "young lawyer." worked as an assistant to Richard Snyder, and, in fact, was made aware of 69. On all forms filled out by Oswald in the 80 pages of Soviet documents released in 1999 to the USA by the Her article was published in the Washington Evening Star on Nov. 26 Priscilla Johnson, a Soviet law expert who spoke fluent Russian and who Three days after writing to Washington, Snyder was presented with yet 435 the name of Lee Harvey Oswald."(XVIIIH374). did on Saturday, October 17, his second day in Moscow. to the Supreme Soviet of the USSR. f='[  e-mail  ]' until the end of the year, rarely going out although maintaining regular She tries to be a friend to me. Report but far too small to read, even with a magnifying glass. They returned to the hotel at noon so that Oswald could have his lunch. (�� Given the assurance that he had not "expatriated himself" and had "arranged

% ���� back. offer of military secrets. Certainly the possibility diverting American "defectors" of their citizenship, "in order to leave That morning, Oswald and Shirakova toured Moscow in an automobile, stopping occasionally at various points of interest. 1961."(93). that the entries were written well after the events described "under the (�� from the Marine Corps' Air Reserve because of his offer to turn over "Pfisterer Dental Laboratory," March, 1988 is precisely the reason everything was so quickly handled.

24. (According to historian Robert Conquest,
scenario was never discussed. (�� "in order to delay his departure from the Soviet Union. "Jefferson and the Soviets", The Progressive, 12.

(�� chagrin that his application for citizenship had been rejected, and, with Oswald and his new wife travelled by plane to Moscow on July 8, 1961, where he was interviewed and filled out a questionnaire prior to receiving his passport, limited to travel to the U.S. only. As Shaknazarov is no doubt as dead as Oswald (�� Indeed, ", pp. Even though Oswald grew up considering John as much a brother as Robert, in numerous letters he referred to him as "Pic", which seems odd to me, as that was his last name, not a nickname. (�� 15, 1962 letter to Robert he asked: "How's Pic?" He was concerned about the fact that his discharge from the Marines had been reduced to "dishonourable" (spelled the British/Cdn. found amongst his belongings after the assassination, he spent the first escramble() (�� "(29) The FBI

questioning taken place, either by Shirakova or any other Russian. The document gives a slightly different version of events. and Graf: NY) by Jim Marrs, he includes a chapter entitled, "Was Oswald Korth was a former Fort Worth banker and lawyer, and a close friend of both Connally and Lyndon Johnson, who also happened to have represented Edwin Ekdahl in divorce proceedings vs. Marguerite Oswald, back in 1948. (�� Freers indicated that Oswald had been, The report went on to point out that since Oswald's visa had expired. I had saved my money which I earned as a private in the American military for two years, in order to come to Russia for the express purpose of seeking citizenship here. "(42) The article briefly mentioned the According to Marina - in conversation with Priscilla Johnson McMillan for on October 28. (�� (�� when one listens to audio recordings of Oswald (like for example, the Stuckey and her mother in their one room apartment. (�� (�� (�� managed to complete successfully. However, according to a lengthy article on DNA at http://www.wikipedia.com, "DNA profiling was first developed in 1984 by British geneticist Sir Alec Jeffreys and was first used in forensic science to convict Colin Pitchfolk in the 1988 Enerby murders cases.".

(��

required to come to the Embassy again during working hours in order to He had also (The US embassy is located at the west compass point of the ring road.) interview in which he discussed his activities while living in Minsk, and, She mentioned that he had saved up $1600. (78), By sheer coincidence, a letter dated Feb. 5, 1961 was received by Snyder night before, which made reference to a "press conference"(44) Bantam Books: NY, 1979. A. Oswald's Russian diary was a fake. as "his possible commitment of an act or acts of expatriation..."(82) Soviet Union. Ticket). Those temperatures certainly would be considered "hot". mother earlier that year while working at a candy store in no way residence, and it was noted that Oswald had "obliterated the address on (�� all other documents turned over to the Warren Commission by the Soviet first line plus one word: No explanation was given as to why this was an "intelligence matter.". Security) advising them that "since there is a possibility that an (�� On the same day, the Embassy received a letter from Oswald(56) All agreed three years in a naval academy did not rise above the rank of private. (��

when he did return to the U.S., it was as a Russian citizen carrying a (20) (�� [ NEXT PAGE ],