TESTIMONY OF ROBERT G. KLAUSE
Mr. Dulles. Would you kindly raise your right hand?
Do you solemnly swear that the testimony you are about to give will be the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth, so help you God?
Mr. Klause. Yes, sir.
Mr. Jenner. You are Robert G. Klause?
Mr. Klause. Yes, sir.
Mr. Jenner. And you appear here voluntarily today?
Mr. Klause. Yes, sir.
Mr. Jenner. I may say, Mr. Chairman, I reached Mr. Klause in Dallas yesterday afternoon. He had just returned from a 2-week vacation. He volunteered to come. The Secret Service got him on a plane with but minutes to spare, and no baggage. This he did to accommodate the Commission.
Mr. Klause is here to testify with respect to the genesis and dissemination of the "Wanted For Treason" handbill, Commission Exhibit No. 996.
Mr. Dulles. Proceed, please.
Mr. Jenner. Your age, please?
Mr. Klause. 32.
Mr. Jenner. You are a married man?
Mr. Klause. Yes, sir.
Mr. Jenner. You were born and reared in this country?
Mr. Klause. Yes, sir.
Mr. Jenner. Likewise your wife?
Mr. Klause. Yes, sir.
Mr. Jenner. And your parents?
Mr. Klause. Yes, sir.
Mr. Jenner. And you reside in Texas?
Mr. Jenner. Where?
Mr. Klause. Dallas.
Mr. Jenner. What address?
Mr. Klause. 1126 South Waverly.
Mr. Jenner. And what is the name of your mother?
Mr. Klause. Dorothy Anna Mercer.
Mr. Jenner. And is she engaged in a printing business in Dallas?
Mr. Klause. Yes, sir.
Mr. Jenner. She and her husband?
Mr. Klause. Yes, sir.
Mr. Jenner. What is her husband's first name? Clifford?
Mr. Klause. Clifford; yes, sir.
Mr. Jenner. Are you employed in their business?
Mr. Klause. Yes, sir.
Mr. Jenner. Is that the Lettercraft Printing Co.?
Mr. Klause. Yes, sir.
Mr. Jenner. And that is located where?
Mr. Klause. 2615 Oak Lawn, Dallas.
Mr. Jenner. And how long have you been employed in the Lettercraft Printing Co.?
Mr. Klause. I would say approximately about a year and a half. I think we have been open about a year and a half, it might be going on 2 years.
Mr. Jenner. And tell us what the nature of that printing company is.
Mr. Klause. Offset lithography, letterheads, statements, envelopes, things like that.
Mr. Jenner. Is it a small house?
Mr. Klause. Yes, sir.
Mr. Jenner. Were you employed theretofore by a different printing company?
Mr. Klause. Sir?
Mr. Jenner. Were you formerly employed by another printing company in Dallas?
Mr. Klause. Yes, sir.
Mr. Jenner. And that was Johnson Printing Co.?
Mr. Klause. Johnson Printing Co.; yes, sir. With several other companies in town.
Mr. Jenner. I see. And where is Johnson Printing Co. located?
Mr. Klause. I think it is the 2700 block of Haskell in Dallas.
Mr. Jenner. Did you become acquainted with Robert A. Surrey while you were employed at Johnson Printing Co.?
Mr. Klause. Yes, sir.
Mr. Jenner. Had you known him before that?
Mr. Klause. No, sir.
Mr. Jenner. I show you a document which has been identified and admitted in evidence as Commission Exhibit No. 996. The particular document I show you is a Xerox reproduction of the original exhibit.
Did you play some part in producing the original, the original copy and materials from which the Exhibit No. 996 I show you was prepared?
Mr. Klause. I am not too sure what you mean but as far as laying—laying the job out, no, sir. Now, like I said, I ran the job. I shot the negatives.
Mr. Jenner. Perhaps we can get at it this way, sir. When first did you have any connection with this matter?
Mr. Klause. Approximately, I would say, a month before President Kennedy came to town.
Mr. Jenner. How did that arise?
Mr. Klause. Mr. Surrey called on me and asked me if I would run a job.
Mr. Jenner. You say he called on you. Where were you when he called on you?
Mr. Klause. I believe I was at the shop. In fact, I know I was at the shop. He must have called me at the shop.
Mr. Jenner. When you say shop, you mean the Lettercraft Printing Co.?
Mr. Klause. Yes, sir.
Mr. Jenner. He came to Lettercraft Printing Co.?
Mr. Klause. No, sir; he called.
Mr. Jenner. What did he say?
Mr. Klause. He said that he had a little job he would like to have run, and would I run it myself?
Mr. Jenner. And you responded?
Mr. Klause. I said yes, sir.
Mr. Jenner. Did he come over to your shop?
Mr. Klause. Mr. Jenner, to be honest with you, really I do not remember now. I might have gone out, or he might have come over. To be perfectly honest, right at the present time I do not remember.
Mr. Jenner. Did I understand you to say that you said to him you would run it yourself?
Mr. Klause. Yes, sir.
Mr. Jenner. You mean by that something distinct from or having Lettercraft Printing Co. run it?
Mr. Klause. He asked me if I was interested in doing a little job on the side, and I said yes, sir.
Mr. Jenner. By "on the side," does that mean that you were going to do some reproduction printing for him, other than as a job for the Lettercraft Printing Co.?
Mr. Klause. Yes, sir. You see, I have my own shop.
Mr. Jenner. You do?
Mr. Klause. Yes, sir.
Mr. Jenner. Where is that located?
Mr. Klause. Actually, I operate out of my house. But I have always had my own shop. I mean I have two or three little insert accounts that I do, and a couple of beauty suppliers. They will come in and want 500 letterheads. For a long time, when I was out of work, I went out and solicited work door to door. Then I would job them out to other printers. And then when I could get my hands on a press, I would run them myself.
Mr. Jenner. Was Mr. Surrey aware of this practice?
Mr. Klause. Yes, sir; I am sure he was.
Mr. Jenner. And he proposed to you at the outset that you do it "on the side"?
Mr. Klause. Yes, sir.
Mr. Jenner. Now, you met with Mr. Surrey after this telephone call?
Mr. Klause. Yes, sir.
Mr. Jenner. Do you recall whether it was at your home or whether it was at the Lettercraft Co. or some other place?
Mr. Klause. Actually, like I say, Mr. Jenner, I am not real sure. I do not know whether it was out at—I am pretty sure it was not at the shop. And Mr. Surrey has never been to my house. And so it must have been out.
Mr. Jenner. Now, there are two reproductions of President Kennedy, a profile and a front view. Did you prepare the plates from which those profiles were made?
Mr. Klause. By preparing the plates—the only thing that I actually did is—either it was two newspaper clippings or magazine clippings.
Mr. Jenner. From whom did you receive the magazine clippings?
Mr. Klause. From Mr. Surrey.
Mr. Jenner. They were slick paper magazine clippings?
Mr. Klause. Something on a slick paper basis; yes, sir.
Mr. Jenner. That contained the front and profile of President Kennedy, which is reproduced on Commission Exhibit No. 996?
Mr. Klause. Yes, sir.
Mr. Jenner. Now, what did you do with those two slick magazine reproductions of President Kennedy's head?
Mr. Klause. Well, I tried to shoot them, and I could not shoot them. We have our own camera. We take a picture of it—reproduce it.
Mr. Jenner. You must assume that none of us is experienced in the printing business. And when you say "shoot"——
Mr. Klause. I will explain myself more carefully. When they were brought to me——
Mr. Klause. Yes, sir. Then I tried to make negatives of them——
Mr. Jenner. Negatives on film?
Mr. Klause. Yes, sir; on film.
Mr. Jenner. Yes.
Mr. Klause. I could not do it. When I take a picture of copy, on most of your offset or lithography work, you have dot patterns. And when I would try to use my camera, the dot patterns would kind of blur, and you could not see what it was. It was just a big blur. So I sent the negatives of the two pictures downtown, down to Monk Brothers Lithography Service downtown, which shoots nothing but negatives.
Mr. Jenner. That is J. T. Monk?
Mr. Klause. Tommy Monk, of Monk Bros.
Mr. Jenner. J. T. Monk is the father, and Tommy Monk, or J. T. Monk, Jr., is the son.
Mr. Klause. The only person I know down there is Tommy.
Mr. Jenner. He is a young man?
Mr. Klause. No, sir; Tommy I have known 12 or 13 years. He is somewhere around 50, 55, probably.
Mr. Jenner. Is he the apparent owner or manager at least of this——
Mr. Klause. Yes, sir.
Mr. Jenner. Is it a lithography company?
Mr. Klause. Well, it is a negative service. In other words, what they do is supply the printers with blanks, and ink, and ink knives, different fountain solutions, things like that, for the press, and also they have their own cameras. They have probably two $15,000 or $20,000 cameras there. And, of course, they can produce work from their cameras I cannot touch on my little camera, or our camera at the shop.
Mr. Jenner. So you took the two magazine pictures of President Kennedy to Monk Bros.?
Mr. Klause. Yes, sir.
Mr. Jenner. For the purpose of having Monk Bros. make negatives, film negatives of them?
Mr. Klause. Yes, sir.
Mr. Jenner. Which in turn were to be employed to do what?
Mr. Klause. To be employed to be run on this job. I mean it was part of this piece right here.
Mr. Jenner. And do you recall what the charge was by Monk Bros. for that service?
Mr. Klause. No, sir; I think it was around three and a half, four and a half, something like that.
Mr. Jenner. Did you pay in cash?
Mr. Klause. Yes, sir.
Mr. Jenner. And you paid in cash because you did not want it charged to Lettercraft Printing Co.?
Mr. Klause. No, sir; I originally had a charge account at Monk Bros. But I still owe a little on my bill down there; and at the time I just rather had paid for it. Not knowing what the job was then anyway—I mean when I go down there and buy supplies for myself, since—I owe the man money, I try whatever I can to pay for, because I have got a pretty nice little bill down there now, and I do not want to run it up any higher.
Mr. Jenner. When you received the negatives, then what did you do with the negatives?
Mr. Klause. Well, the bottom part was shot, or picture was made with the camera at our shop; and then I stripped the negative in. In other words, I put the two top pieces, the picture and the bottom part together. And then made a plate on it.
Mr. Jenner. Made a plate from those negatives?
Mr. Klause. Yes, sir.
Mr. Jenner. In turn to be employed in printing the handbill?
Mr. Klause. Yes, sir.
Mr. Jenner. When you received those negatives, did you again communicate with Mr. Surrey?
Mr. Klause. I do not believe I understand what you mean, Mr. Jenner.
Mr. Jenner. After you obtained usable negatives from Monk Bros., did you advise Mr. Surrey that you now had obtained those usable negatives and would be able to proceed with the job?
Mr. Klause. No, sir.
Mr. Jenner. Had Mr. Surrey advised you as to how many he wished of these handbills?
Mr. Klause. Approximately—he said approximately 6,000, 7,000.
Mr. Jenner. You made a plate from which the front and profile of President Kennedy as appears on Exhibit No. 996 was made?
Mr. Klause. Yes, sir.
Mr. Jenner. Now, there is copy below the profile and front view, as you will notice on the exhibit before you. From what source did you receive that copy?
Mr. Klause. That copy came, sir; as was—just approximately about the way it is here. I do not know whether it was typed on—I do not know that much about a Varitypewriter. Or it might have been letterpress. Somebody might have set it up letterpress or Linotype, and ran a press proof; I do not know.
Mr. Jenner. From whom did you receive that press-proof copy?
Mr. Klause. I received all the copy from Mr. Surrey.
Mr. Jenner. And the copy, then, as you received it from Mr. Surrey, which is in turn reflected on Commission Exhibit No. 996, was in the form at that time, when you received it from Mr. Surrey, that it now appears in on Commission Exhibit No. 996?
Mr. Klause. Yes, sir.
Mr. Jenner. How did you reproduce it onto the handbill?
Mr. Klause. Well, this was run offset, like I said, all of it was put on film. Then it was burnt into what we call a metal plate, which we expose to light. It is a light-sensitive plate, and any time light hits it, where you have clear spots on your film, that image of the light will burn into your plate. When you process the plate out, you come up with a developer, which brings the image out. Then once you put that plate on the press, that image will pick up type.
Mr. Jenner. When did Mr. Surrey bring you that copy with respect to the time when he brought the two slick magazine reproductions of President Kennedy's profile and front views?
Mr. Klause. I believe it was all at the same time. This was—the pictures were the only thing I even took out of the envelope at one time. The rest of it I did not even bother to look at.
Mr. Jenner. Who, if anybody, assisted you in printing up the handbills?
Mr. Klause. Nobody.
Mr. Jenner. Mrs. Klause did not help you?
Mr. Klause. She was in front of the shop. In fact, I do not even think she ever came back.
Mr. Jenner. When you say shop are you talking now of your own shop in your home or the shop at Lettercraft?
Mr. Klause. Lettercraft.
Mr. Jenner. So the handbills were actually printed by you in the Lettercraft Printing Co. shop?
Mr. Klause. Yes, sir; after hours.
Mr. Jenner. After you had—how many did you print, if you recall?
Mr. Klause. I would say, Mr. Jenner, approximately 5,000—5,200, 5,300.
Mr. Jenner. What did you do with them after you printed them?
Mr. Klause. I put them in a box. In fact, I did not even wrap them. I just stuck them in a box. And I contacted Mr. Surrey the next day.
Mr. Jenner. And now, give us your recollection as to when you made contact with Mr. Surrey—with particular reference to November 22, 1963.
Mr. Klause. I would say, sir; it was approximately 2 or 2½ weeks before Mr. Kennedy was in Dallas.
Mr. Jenner. That would be the early part of November 1963?
Mr. Klause. Yes, sir; as close as I can remember right now.
Mr. Jenner. Did you deliver the 5,000 plus handbills personally to Mr. Surrey?
Mr. Jenner. And where did that delivery take place?
Mr. Klause. Now, that I do remember. That was about 5 blocks approximately from the shop. It was—from Lettercraft. It was a little cafe there which we call the Waffle Shop. It is the Pal's Waffle Shop.
Mr. Jenner. Did you make—I take it then you made arrangements with Mr. Surrey to meet him at Pal's Waffle Shop, rather than he come to the Lettercraft Printing Co.
Mr. Klause. I called him and told him that they were ready, and he said, "Where can I meet you?" and I was getting ready to go to lunch at the time anyway. I believe it was lunch or coffee. I said, "I'm getting ready to go out for coffee. I am going to go up about 5 blocks up the street to the Waffle Shop." He said, "I'll meet you there, then."
Mr. Jenner. Did Mrs. Klause accompany you?
Mr. Klause. No, sir; she was at work.
Mr. Jenner. Anybody accompany you?
Mr. Klause. No, sir.
Mr. Jenner. You met Mr. Surrey at the Pal's Waffle Shop?
Mr. Klause. Yes, sir.
Mr. Jenner. You delivered him all of the handbills you had printed up?
Mr. Klause. Yes, sir.
Mr. Jenner. What color were those?
Mr. Klause. The handbills were run on what we call assorted dodger stock—green and orange and blue and yellow. It is a cheap colored newspaper print is what it is.
Mr. Jenner. From where did you obtain the assorted dodger stock?
Mr. Klause. Olmstead Kirk Paper Co.
Mr. Jenner. Did you make it as an individual purchase or was that a purchase on behalf of the Lettercraft Printing Co.?
Mr. Klause. No; that was my own purchase.
Mr. Jenner. You purchased that and paid for it in cash?
Mr. Klause. Yes, sir.
Mr. Jenner. Now, were you paid for this work you did for Mr. Surrey?
Mr. Klause. Yes, sir.
Mr. Jenner. And what did he pay you?
Mr. Klause. I think it was $40, Mr. Jenner. In fact, I am almost positive.
Mr. Jenner. Was it in cash?
Mr. Klause. Yes, sir.
Mr. Jenner. When next did you see Mr. Surrey after you had delivered the handbills to him?
Mr. Klause. I would say approximately 2 or 3 weeks after Mr. Kennedy was assassinated in Dallas.
Mr. Jenner. So I take it then you had no contact with Mr. Surrey of any kind or character from the day you delivered the 5,000 plus handbills to him in Pal's Waffle Shop until some 2 weeks after President Kennedy's assassination on November 22, 1963.
Mr. Klause. Yes, sir; that is correct.
Mr. Jenner. That whole time span was a month to 5 weeks?
Mr. Klause. Yes, sir; and then at that time I called Mr. Surrey myself personally.
Mr. Jenner. Why?
Mr. Klause. Like I said, I have two or three accounts, and I had one job that I could not run, it was a big job. A lot of printers will work with other printers in jobbing out work. I took this job and jobbed it out—Mr. Surrey jobbed it out to Johnson, and let Johnson run it. And I in turn paid Bob for the job, when the people paid me, and I delivered the job, and I made a commission off of it.
Mr. Jenner. On that occasion when you saw Mr. Surrey, did you have a conversation—did you have any conversation with him with respect to the dodger or handbill, Commission Exhibit No. 996?
Mr. Klause. Yes, sir; I imagine there was. I cannot exactly say what it is now. But I imagine there was something said—because I was quite upset about it at the time.
Mr. Jenner. The FBI interviewed you about this incident, did they not?
Mr. Klause. The Secret Service did; yes, sir.
Mr. Jenner. And when you were first interviewed, you did not disclose to the Secret Service the facts with respect to Mr. Surrey delivering this material to you and your having printed it for him, delivered it to him, and he paying you?
Mr. Klause. No, sir; nothing at all.
Mr. Jenner. What led you to do that, Mr. Klause?
Mr. Klause. Well, I started thinking about it, and then the folks were getting real upset about it, because I had put them in a jam, which it was my own fault.
Mr. Jenner. When you say folks, you mean your mother and stepfather?
Mr. Klause. Yes, sir; and I mean I like to help friends as much as I can, and be good to people as much as I can. But people in my family are going to come closer than my friends are.
Mr. Jenner. You finally decided to reveal the full facts respecting this handbill?
Mr. Klause. Yes, sir.
Mr. Jenner. And you did so to the Secret Service?
Mr. Klause. Yes, sir.
Mr. Jenner. Did Mr. Surrey approach you at any time to suggest to you that you should not reveal the source of this handbill?
Mr. Klause. No, sir; I talked to him—I believe it was probably a couple of days after the Secret Service was out. And I told him those people were wanting to know things—I mean doing their job, that they wanted to find something out.
I said this is strictly out of my territory—I did not know what I was supposed to do. And he said, well, I could either get myself a lawyer or just not say anything at all.
Mr. Jenner. Did you ever tell him you made up your mind you were going to tell the full facts about this matter?
Mr. Klause. No, sir; not really. I think in so many words he might have understood that I was.
Mr. Jenner. Did he ever make a remark to you, "Well, that is the way the ball bounces."
Mr. Klause. It sounds like—it seems to ring a bell, but I cannot place it.
Mr. Jenner. Was that not in fact said by him in connection with your telling him that you had reached the conclusion that you had to tell the full facts about this matter?
Mr. Klause. Yes, sir; I believe so.
Mr. Jenner. Does that refresh your recollection?
Mr. Klause. The ball bounces—yes, sir—that rings a bell now.
Mr. Jenner. Up to November 22, 1963, had you ever heard the name Lee Harvey Oswald?
Mr. Klause. No, sir.
Mr. Jenner. Had you ever seen anybody up to that day who purported to be or whom you were advised was Lee Harvey Oswald?
Mr. Klause. No, sir.
Mr. Jenner. I show you Garner Exhibit No. 1. Did you ever see that man prior to November 22, 1963?
Mr. Klause. No, sir. The only time I seen this man was on television and in the paper.
Mr. Jenner. You mean on or after November 22, 1963?
Mr. Klause. Yes, sir.
Mr. Jenner. I hand you Commission Exhibit No. 520, and direct your attention to the center figure appearing on that photograph. Did you ever see that man prior to November 22, 1963?
Mr. Klause. No, sir.
Mr. Jenner. Did you have a conversation with Mr. Surrey as to the purpose for which the handbill was to be put?
Mr. Klause. No, sir.
Mr. Jenner. When you read this copy, did that not alarm you or upset you? It is rather provocative, is it not, and it has a title "Wanted for Treason."
Mr. Klause. Actually, Mr. Jenner, I did not even pay any attention to the copy at all. It was late at night at the time I ran it. I did not pay any attention to it at all—which I should have done, I admit now. But I did not.
Mr. Jenner. You were running it at night because you were doing this on the side?
Mr. Klause. Yes, sir.
Mr. Jenner. You do have some printing equipment in your own apartment or home?
Mr. Klause. No, sir. Not at my house; no, sir.
Mr. Jenner. You used the equipment of the Lettercraft Printing Co., did you?
Mr. Klause. Yes, sir.
Mr. Jenner. And you did this at night because you were doing it on the side with the Lettercraft Printing Co. equipment?
Mr. Klause. Yes, sir.
Mr. Jenner. Did you advise your mother or your stepfather you were doing this?
Mr. Klause. Now, let me explain this to you. When they opened the shop up I started to work for approximately $35 a week, and what few accounts I had, I turned over to the shop, and there was a couple of little accounts, like friends of mine that I ran around with, rode motorcycles with and things like that, that I kept for myself. And I mean that was my spending money. And they made the understanding—we made the understanding, when the shop was opened, that whatever little jobs like that that I had, I could do on the side at night—as long as it did not interfere with work during the day.
Mr. Jenner. Did you tell your mother or stepfather that you had done this work?
Mr. Klause. No, sir.
Mr. Jenner. Did you tell them eventually?
Mr. Klause. Yes, sir.
Mr. Jenner. They found out about it eventually?
Mr. Klause. Yes, sir.
Mr. Jenner. You kept the money, did you?
Mr. Klause. Yes, sir.
Mr. Jenner. Do you know General Edwin A. Walker, resigned?
Mr. Klause. No, sir.
Mr. Jenner. Have you ever heard of him?
Mr. Klause. I have heard of him.
Mr. Jenner. Did you ever have any contact with him?
Mr. Klause. No, sir.
Mr. Jenner. Were you aware that Robert A. Surrey was associated with General Edwin A. Walker at the time you made up these handbills?
Mr. Klause. No, sir.
Mr. Jenner. Did you have any acquaintance with Robert A. Surrey other than as a fellow employee at Johnson Printing Co.?
Mr. Klause. No, sir.
Mr. Jenner. And this incident about which you have testified?
Mr. Klause. No, sir.
Senator Cooper. May I ask a question there? Did Surrey ever tell you what he intended to do with these throwaways, or posters, or make any remarks about them at all?
Mr. Klause. No, sir. He just asked me to do the job—said he had a customer that wanted it done. And that is all that was ever said about it.
Senator Cooper. He did not tell you what the customer wanted to do with them?
Mr. Klause. No, sir.
Mr. Jenner. But at the very outset he asked you to do this on the side?
Mr. Klause. Yes, sir.
Senator Cooper. Mr. Chairman, I think I am going to have to leave now. I have no further questions.
(At this point, Senator Cooper left the hearing room.)
Mr. Jenner. Have you ever heard of the American Eagle Publishing Co.?
Mr. Klause. Yes, sir. It takes a minute to ring a bell, but it rings a bell.
Mr. Jenner. Did you ever do any work for the American Eagle Publishing Co.?
Mr. Klause. No, sir.
Mr. Jenner. That is a company with which Mr. Surrey is associated?
Mr. Klause. Yes, sir; I believe so. That is why I heard that mentioned.
Mr. Jenner. How did you become acquainted with that fact? And when?
Mr. Klause. I believe there was a discussion one day that sometimes on jobs—I think this was done, we talked about this at Johnson at the time.
Mr. Jenner. At the time you were employed at Johnson?
Mr. Klause. Yes, sir. That jobs would come in that he would send through—might not be too much commission in it or something, or might not be a big job, where he would job through this place, which in turn then would job back through Johnson. Then he would get probably a markup plus a commission. How it is worked, I do not know, sir.
Mr. Jenner. You were aware of the fact that Mr. Surrey and General Walker were the two partners in American Eagle Publishing Co.?
Mr. Klause. No, sir.
Mr. Jenner. But you knew he had some connection with the company—Mr. Surrey?
Mr. Klause. Yes, sir. Like I said, he had mentioned it.
Mr. Jenner. Mr. Surrey had mentioned it to you. Did he tell you he was an officer of that company?
Mr. Klause. Well, as far as I knew, he was sole owner.
Mr. Jenner. I see.
Mr. Klause. It is what I thought was an assumed name, like myself. I do not know how the laws are here, but in Texas when you open up in business, you have got to file an assumed name certificate—if it is under an assumed name or your name or whatever the name is, you have to file that business.
Mr. Jenner. Do you have an assumed name certificate for your private business?
Mr. Klause. Yes, sir.
Mr. Jenner. What is it?
Mr. Klause. Klause Printing.
Mr. Jenner. Were you not aware of the fact that Mr. Surrey had some connection with General Edwin A. Walker?
Mr. Klause. No, sir.
Mr. Jenner. At no time?
Mr. Klause. No, sir.
Mr. Jenner. Did you ever see that tall yellow covered book published almost like a pamphlet, published by the American Eagle Publishing Co., which contained reprints of various news stories of the assassination?
Mr. Klause. Yes, sir; this might be hard to believe. I saw the book. In fact, I think I have a copy of it. But to this day, I have yet to crack the cover on it. I have never even opened it.
Mr. Jenner. What I want to question you about—did you look at the back of the book, the back cover of the book?
Mr. Klause. No, sir; I noticed the front, and put it in the car. I carried it in the car for about a week, with a bunch of my scratch pads I hand out to my customers. And one night I went home to unload the car, and I unloaded everything out of the car and put it in the house. And since then I never looked at it.
Mr. Jenner. You never noticed that Surrey appears on the backside of the back cover as the president of the American Eagle Publishing Co.
Mr. Klause. No, sir.
Mr. Jenner. Have you ever heard of the Carousel Club in Dallas?
Mr. Klause. Yes, sir; I have heard of it.
Mr. Jenner. Do you know where it is located?
Mr. Klause. All I can tell you, sir, it is downtown. I have never been there.
Mr. Jenner. You have never been there?
Mr. Klause. No, sir.
Mr. Jenner. Did you ever meet Jack Ruby?
Mr. Jenner. Did you ever see Jack Ruby prior to the 24th of November 1963?
Mr. Klause. No, sir; I have never seen him and have never met him.
Mr. Jenner. You've never seen him before or since or on that day?
Mr. Klause. No, sir.
Mr. Jenner. Did you ever have any business with him of any kind or character?
Mr. Klause. No, sir; as soon as he was put in jail, from what I understand, the biggest part of his property went up for sale, and the people—some people that bought some of his property, or bought his business, called on us to do a job.
Mr. Jenner. This was after the assassination?
Mr. Klause. Yes, sir; this was after—in fact, I imagine sometime after his trial. And I called on those people. We printed I think 500 letterheads and 500 envelopes, something like that, plus 2,000 circulars about open from 7 until 2 in the morning, and then the dance band who was there. In fact, they still owe the bill at the shop. In fact from what I understand, that place is closed up again now.
Mr. Jenner. Did Lettercraft Printing Co. ever do any work for Jack Ruby, to your knowledge?
Mr. Klause. No, sir.
Mr. Jenner. Did Johnson Printing Co. ever do any work for Jack Ruby, to your knowledge?
Mr. Klause. No, sir; not to my knowledge. And I can assure you that Lettercraft didn't, because if it had, it would have crossed my desk.
Mr. Jenner. Were you generally aware of the jobs that went through Johnson Printing?
Mr. Klause. That came to my press, yes sir. Now, Johnson—I don't know whether you know it—it is a pretty good sized shop. It is one of the biggest in Dallas. In fact, you could put my whole shop in just one room over there.
Mr. Jenner. When you talk about your shop you are talking about Lettercraft?
Mr. Klause. Yes, sir; now, on the press that I was working on, nothing ever came in; no, sir.
Mr. Jenner. I think that will be all. May I look at my notes, Mr. Chairman.
Mr. Dulles. Have you told us in detail all your conversations with Mr. Surrey, from the time that this particular job started until it was concluded?
Mr. Klause. Yes, sir.
Mr. Dulles. Did he tell you at all what his purpose was?
Mr. Klause. No, sir; the only thing I mentioned—he said he had a customer that wanted it.
Mr. Jenner. He did not identify the customer?
Mr. Klause. No, sir.
Mr. Dulles. But he indicated he was doing this for a customer?
Mr. Klause. Yes, sir.
Mr. Dulles. Do you recall whether at the time Mr. Surrey first spoke with you about this job, it was publicly known that President Kennedy was to visit Dallas?
Mr. Klause. It might have been; but not to my knowledge, sir.
Mr. Dulles. You did not know at that time that President Kennedy was going to visit Dallas?
Mr. Klause. No, sir.
Mr. Dulles. And I think you have testified that your first contact with Mr. Surrey about this was some 3 weeks before the visit?
Mr. Klause. Yes, sir.
Mr. Dulles. Around the first of November that would be?
Mr. Klause. Yes, sir; now, it might have came out in the paper that Mr. Kennedy was coming to Dallas, but we don't take the paper. And usually by the time we get home and feed the kids, we don't have time to read the paper anyway. We might watch the late movie on television. We don't keep up with the news, which we should, but we don't. And that is probably the way it got in without me knowing it. But I had no knowledge at all.
Mr. Jenner. Mrs. Klause works, does she?
Mr. Klause. Yes, sir.
Mr. Jenner. And you both get home about the same time do you?
Mr. Klause. Yes, sir—the biggest part of the time we do.
Mr. Jenner. How many children do you have?
Mr. Klause. We have three.
Mr. Jenner. I exhibit to you another handbill which we will mark as Commission Exhibit No. 1053.
(The document referred to was marked Commission Exhibit No. 1053 for identification.)
Mr. Jenner. For the purpose of the record, this is entitled "Wanted for Murder," and it had a front view and profile of Mr. Khrushchev. It is signed "Minutemen" in printing, with quotations.
Have you ever seen that document before or one like it?
Mr. Klause. No, sir.
Mr. Jenner. Do you see any form of type there that is the kind of type that is reproduced in Lettercraft Printing?
Mr. Klause. No, sir.
Mr. Jenner. Does that appear to be any type font or printing with which you became familiar at Johnson Printing Co.?
Mr. Klause. No, sir; actually from a printer's viewpoint—just looking at it from this angle here—that could be done off of a typewriter. That looks more like a typewriter than it does off a Linotype machine.
Mr. Jenner. And after its having been typed, then reproduced in the fashion in which Commission Exhibit No. 996 was reproduced?
Mr. Klause. Yes, sir.
Mr. Jenner. The mechanical processes you have described. You called it a blanket?
Mr. Klause. Plate.
Mr. Jenner. Make up a plate of the whole sheet—you photograph the sheet, then make a plate, and reproduce from the plate?
Mr. Klause. Yes, sir.
Now why I say it doesn't look like Linotype—in Linotype most of your columns or your paragraphs are butted up straight. In other words, you got straight edges on both sides. Whereas on a typewriter you cannot flush. It takes somebody exceptionally skilled with a typewriter to flush the corners. These edges here are not flush.
Mr. Jenner. You are talking about the right-hand margin?
Mr. Klause. Yes, sir; you see your left hand is flush. Now on a Linotype those on the right can be flushed.
Mr. Jenner. Now, directing your attention to Commission Exhibit No. 996, are the right-hand margins of that material flushed as you call it?
Mr. Klause. These I would say were pretty close to being flush. It would be more of a Linotype than this Exhibit No. 1053 here.
Mr. Jenner. That would lead you to believe, then, that the copy on Commission Exhibit No. 996 was produced in the first instance on a Linotype machine?
Mr. Klause. Linotype or——
Mr. Jenner. A Ludlow?
Mr. Klause. Possibly. I was getting ready to Varitype. Varitype would come up close to flushing it.
Mr. Jenner. But Commission Exhibit No. 1053 does not stimulate your recollection in any respect whatsoever?
Mr. Klause. No, sir.
Mr. Jenner. You never heard about that handbill?
Mr. Klause. No, sir.
Mr. Jenner. Wholly apart from never having seen it?
Mr. Klause. No, sir.
Mr. Jenner. My handing it to you a moment ago was the first time you ever knew of the existence of a handbill of that type?
Mr. Klause. Yes, Sir.
Mr. Jenner. You never heard any discussion of it heretofore?
Mr. Klause. No, Sir.
Mr. Jenner. Mr. Chairman, I have covered all of the details with Mr. Klause. I have no further questions of him.
Mr. Dulles. I have no more questions. We thank you very much, Mr. Klause, for coming. We appreciate your testimony.
Mr. Klause. I am glad I can do what I can do. I would like to get this straightened out. I feel real guilty about it.
Mr. Jenner. Is there anything you would like to add, Mr. Klause?
Mr. Klause. No, sir; except that it is a mess, and that I am just a poor country boy, I guess you would say, that got caught up in the mess, and I strictly learned my lesson on this.
I have hurt a bunch of people, especially my folks, and I have caused a lot of trouble. I just feel real bad about it. That is all. If I had taken time to have read the thing actually I don't think I would ever have done it.
But like I said, it was late at night, and I was in a hurry, and I wanted to get it on and off.
Mr. Jenner. And you needed the money.
Mr. Klause. And I needed the money; yes, sir.
Mr. Dulles. What did you net on this?
Mr. Klause. $40. Actually, I think the stock was somewhere around $20. I paid for the stock, and he in turn paid for the stock.
Mr. Dulles. $40 was your profit on this?
Mr. Klause. Yes, sir.
Mr. Jenner. $40 was the full profit to you?
Mr. Klause. Yes, sir.
Mr. Dulles. Have you anything further, Mr. Jenner?
Mr. Jenner. No; I have not.
Mr. Dulles. The Commission will stand adjourned.
(Whereupon, at 4:15 p.m., the President's Commission recessed.)
[Thursday, July 2, 1964]
TESTIMONY OF MARK LANE RESUMED
The President's Commission met at 2 p.m., on July 2, 1964, at 200 Maryland Avenue NE., Washington, D.C.
Present were: Chief Justice Earl Warren, Chairman; and Representative Gerald R. Ford, member.
Also present were J. Lee Rankin, general counsel; and Norman Redlich, assistant counsel.
The Chairman. The Commission will be in order.
Mr. Lane, the last time you were here, we excused you as a witness. You should be sworn again as a witness.
Do you solemnly swear that the testimony you shall give before this Commission will be the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth, so help you God?
Mr. Lane. I do.
The Chairman. You may be seated, please. Mr. Rankin will ask you some questions that were not entirely cleared up when you were here last time. Would you proceed?
Mr. Rankin. Mr. Lane, you testified before the Commission the last time on March 4, did you?
Mr. Lane. Yes; I did.
Mr. Rankin. And you recall your testimony at that time?
Mr. Lane. Well, it was rather long testimony. I recall portions of it; yes, sir.
Mr. Rankin. Yes. Do you recall that you were asked about an interview with Helen Markham?
Mr. Lane. I recall testifying to that; yes. I don't know if I was asked about it specifically, but I do recall testifying in reference to that interview.
Mr. Rankin. If you would care to refer to your testimony at any time, you are free to do so.
Mr. Rankin. Do you have any writing from Mrs. Markham in connection with the interview that you referred to in your testimony?
Mr. Lane. Any document which Mrs. Markham wrote? Is that the question?
Mr. Rankin. Either that or anything that she signed which purports to be her statement or affidavit or other recording.
Mr. Lane. I have nothing that she signed or that she wrote.
Mr. Rankin. Do you have anything that you made up yourself from any interview with her?
Mr. Lane. Yes; I do.
Mr. Rankin. Do you have that with you?
Mr. Lane. No; I do not.
Mr. Rankin. Will you describe that document? Is it a paper or a tape recording, or what form does it have?
Mr. Lane. It is a tape recording and a transcript of the tape recording in writing.
Mr. Rankin. Was the tape recording made by you?
Mr. Lane. I think we are now moving into an area where I would prefer not to answer questions, quite frankly. I have given to the Commission the results of my investigation, and I think that the Commission are aware of the fact that I have an attorney-client relationship existing. The Commission is now asking for working papers of an attorney. The Supreme Court has been quite plain, I think, on the question of the sanctity of working documents of attorneys. And I think, therefore, that the questions are no longer in a proper area.
I might also indicate to the Commission that when I was retained by Marguerite Oswald to represent the interests of her son before this Commission, and the Commission declined to permit me to so represent Lee Oswald, it made it impossible for me to conduct the kind of cross-examination before this Commission of witnesses that I would have ordinarily conducted, and that entire conversation would have been in the presence of the Commission, obviously, had I been permitted to function as counsel for my client.
Mr. Rankin. Will you describe to the Commission the attorney and client relationship that you claim to exist?
Mr. Lane. Yes. I should think the Commission would be well aware of that since I wrote to the Commission on the very day that I was retained and sent, as I recall, an affidavit from my client, detailing the purpose, the purpose of my being retained. I think that was during the very early days of this year.
Mr. Rankin. Who was the client?
Mr. Lane. Marguerite Oswald retained me to conduct an investigation in reference to the charges that were made against her son, then deceased, and to represent his interests before this Commission.
Mr. Rankin. And do you claim that that attorney-client relationship is one that exists now?
Mr. Lane. It does exist at the present time in relationship to a matter peripheral to this investigation. It certainly did exist at the time of my discussion with Mrs. Markham, and my discussion with Mrs. Markham took place solely because of the existence of that relationship and to further that relationship.
Mr. Rankin. Will you state what the peripheral matter is that you referred to?
Mr. Lane. It is the matter that Mrs. Oswald called you and spoke with you on the telephone about yesterday, sir.
Mr. Rankin. What is that?
Mr. Lane. It is in reference to a matter regarding the son of Mrs. Markham.
Mr. Rankin. Will you tell whatever else there is in regard to that?
Mr. Lane. Mrs. Oswald has specifically requested that—in fact, has specifically directed me not to discuss that matter publicly—inasmuch as you have that information—because she talked with me only after she spoke with you, Mr. Rankin. And when she did speak with me, she told me what she had told you precisely early in the day she had told me. I think that the Commission does have that information.
Mr. Rankin. Are you refusing to disclose it, then?
Mr. Lane. I have a specific direction from Mrs. Oswald, who retained me in this peripheral matter just yesterday, not to discuss this matter publicly, sir. She is presently herself involved in investigating this matter, and told me specifically that any publicity in reference to this matter would be harmful to her investigation. I would otherwise be very happy to discuss the matter with you, as I have discussed everything else quite publicly.
Mr. Rankin. And that is your reason for not disclosing it at this time?
Mr. Lane. Yes; coupled with the fact that the Commission has this information, because I assume that Mrs. Oswald did speak with you yesterday. She told me that she did, and she gave you all the information she had in this regard. I believe she gave you more information than she gave to me, as a matter of fact, judging from what she said to me.
Mr. Rankin. Do you claim to be acting for Mrs. Oswald on any other matter than that in connection with her son? That is Helen Markham's son?
Mr. Lane. At the present time?
Mr. Rankin. At the present time.
Mr. Lane. No; I am not.
Mr. Rankin. When did that relationship terminate?
Mr. Lane. I don't recall the exact date, but it was sometime after my testimony here, which was, I believe, on the 4th of March of this year.
Mr. Rankin. Can you fix it more precisely?
Mr. Lane. I believe it was within 2 weeks after that date. I did not bring with me the letter that I wrote to Mrs. Oswald explaining that I could not function before the Commission as counsel because the Commission would not permit me to function as counsel, and that I agreed to serve on a citizen's committee which would conduct an independent inquiry. And, therefore, since it seemed that there was nothing further I could do on behalf of the original purpose of our retainer, that we should probably conclude our professional relationship as of that time had ended. I believe that is the substance of the letter that I sent to Mrs. Oswald. And that is within 2 weeks of March 4.
Representative Ford. Mr. Rankin, may I raise a question about the language which Mr. Lane uses to the effect that the Commission declined to permit Mr. Lane to represent Mrs. Oswald?
I think the record before the Commission on this matter will speak for itself. I think to have the record clear, we ought to have that part of the Commission proceedings inserted in the record at this point.
Mr. Lane. I would like to correct a mistake that you made, Congressman. I did not say that I was not permitted to serve as counsel for Mrs. Oswald before the Commission. I said, I thought quite precisely, that I had not been permitted by the Commission to serve as counsel to represent the interests of Lee Harvey Oswald at the request of his mother, Marguerite Oswald.
Representative Ford. I think we should let the record speak for itself at the time that this matter was raised before the Commission.
The Chairman. That portion of the record may be incorporated in this record at this particular time.
Mr. Lane. I would just like to conclude on this note.
I hope the Commission will give consideration to my request, which the Commission has answered, but which again I would like at this time to renew. That is, that I be permitted, at the request of Mrs. Oswald, the mother of the accused, defendant, really, before this Commission's hearing, to represent his interests here, to have access to the material which you have access to, and the right to present witnesses.
It is not usual for an attorney representing a party to be given an opportunity to testify, which is quite unusual—but rather to be given the opportunity to present witnesses and to cross-examine them. It has generally been my role in criminal cases. Never before have I testified in behalf of a client.
If it is the Commissioners' position that this is not a trial in any respect, and therefore Oswald is not entitled to counsel, that is the position with which I would like to respectfully offer a dissent.
The fact that Oswald is not going to have a real trial flows only from his death, and he is not responsible with that having taken place. Every right belonging to an American citizen charged with a crime was taken from him up to and including his life.
I think now that that episode is completed, hopefully never to reappear ever again in our history, or anything close to it—I think it would be proper to permit him to have counsel before the Commission, counsel who can function on his behalf in terms of cross-examining evidence and presenting witnesses. If it is the Commission's position now that he is entitled to counsel, and the Commission will appoint counsel, then I ask the Commission to consider that the constitutional right to counsel involves the right to counsel of one's choice, or in the event of the death of a party, to counsel of the choice of the surviving members of the family.
If Marina Oswald, the widow, sought to have counsel represent her husband I would think—here—I would think that would cause a conflict and a problem, if the widow and also the mother made the same request. But as I understand it no request has been made by the widow, who has indicated to the press that she believes her husband is guilty, and through her former business agent, Mr. Martin, who I am told was secured for her by the Secret Service as a business agent, she indicated that even a trial which might prove he was innocent, she would still be sure he was guilty, and has indicated since that time no desire to my knowledge to secure counsel for her husband, her late husband, before the Commission.
I think, then, the mother would, in almost any jurisdiction, be the next person to make a decision in this area, and the mother has made a decision, as you know. She has retained me to represent the rights and interests of her son.
I think under those circumstances it would be proper for the Commission to permit me to participate.
This, of course, is not a jury trial. With all due respect to the integrity and background of each of the members of the Commission, I suggest that it is not the function of the trying body to appoint counsel, or the jury to appoint counsel, but in our society it is just the reverse; it is the function of defense counsel to participate in determining who the jury should be.
Many criminal lawyers, very noted counsel, would probably seek to excuse certain—and again no disrespect at all is meant to the background of members of this Commission—but defense counsel generally seeks to excuse as jurors those who are in any way associated with the Government in a criminal case. And here we have the Government appointing the jury, and then the jury picking counsel, who also is Government connected at this time. I in no way wish to raise the question of the integrity of any of the members of the Commission or counsel or anyone else, or their ability. But that truism about equality has some meaning in terms of impartiality—everyone is impartial to some people, and more impartial to other people. And counsel, in order to function, I believe, must be totally independent and totally committed to the responsibility of representing his client.
But above all, he must be secured by someone who has the ability to speak for the deceased, in this case his mother and his wife. And under those circumstances, I renew my request that I be permitted to, at the request of Lee Oswald's mother, who survives him—to function before this Commission as counsel on his behalf.
The Chairman. Mr. Lane, I must advise you that the Commission, as you already know, has considered your request and has denied it. It does not consider you as the attorney for Lee Oswald. Now, this is not for any discussion. We are not going to argue it. You have had your say, and I will just answer.
Lee Oswald left a widow. She is his legal representative. She is represented by counsel. This Commission is cooperating with her in any way she may request. If anyone else wants to present any evidence to the Commission, they may do so. But it is the view and the wish—the will of the Commission—that no one else shall be entitled to participate in the work and the deliberations of the Commission.
We asked you to come here today because we understood that you did have evidence. We are happy to receive it. We want every bit of evidence that you have. You may present anything that you wish to us. But you are not to be a participant in the work of the Commission. I assume you have some questions you would like to ask Mr. Lane, Mr. Rankin?
Mr. Lane. Well, then I ask also, Mr. Chief Justice, at this point the letters, exchange of letters between Mr. Rankin and myself, where I made the request to appear as counsel for the interests of Lee Harvey Oswald, and where counsel for this Commission said that, Oswald was not entitled to counsel, or that I could not represent him——
The Chairman. Let the record speak for itself in that respect, too. The exchange of letters will be in the record. [See Commission Exhibit No. 1053.]
Mr. Lane. Thank you, sir.
Mr. Rankin. Now, Mr. Lane, regarding this tape recording of Helen Markham, and your interview with her, will you tell the Commission when you made this?
Mr. Lane. I had a conversation with Mrs. Markham on the 2d day of March of this year.
Mr. Rankin. Where was that?
Mr. Lane. I have given the Commission the results of that investigation to the best of my ability. I think that, again, Mr. Rankin, your question delves into the functioning of an attorney on behalf of a client, and, therefore, is not proper, and, therefore, I decline to answer it.
Mr. Rankin. Will you tell the Commission when you made the tape recording that you referred to?
Mr. Lane. I just answered that question, Mr. Rankin.
Mr. Rankin. And do you refuse to tell, then, anything about that interview with Helen Markham, how you recorded it?
Mr. Lane. I beg your pardon?
Mr. Rankin. And how you recorded it?
Mr. Lane. I should think that since this Commission has been appointed by the President of the United States to secure all of the information regarding the assassination of President Kennedy and other matters peripheral to that, the questions asked of me should be related to information which can be of assistance to the Commission, and should not be the kind of questions, Mr. Rankin, that you have put to me.
I am happy to tell you every bit of information that I have been able to secure as a private citizen in trying to discover what took place on November 22 and the days that followed November 22, but I think that the very questions that you are putting to me indicates that you are not interested solely in securing that information, but in placing me, Mr. Rankin, in a position which is not a good one. And I see this quite frankly as part of many things that have happened to me since November 22—not November 22, but since I expressed some interest in this case.
Mr. Rankin. Mr. Lane, could you tell us whether there was anyone else present at this interview with Helen Markham that you recorded?
Mr. Lane. I don't believe that I said I recorded it. I believe I said it was recorded.
Mr. Rankin. Was it recorded by someone else?
Mr. Lane. I decline to answer any questions, because the questions you are asking clearly are not for the purpose for which this Commission has been established. And I tell you that I am amazed, quite frankly, Mr. Rankin, that the kind of harassment to which I have been subjected since I became involved in this case continues here in this room—I am amazed by that.
As you know, and I don't know if this has been placed on the record by the Commission—in the letter that I wrote to you on May 18, 1964, I told you that I had been accosted by two agents of the Federal Bureau of Investigation in front of my own house, and ordered to give to them, by them—their names being William E. Folkner, his serial number being 5954, and John P. Dimarchi, his serial number being 4256—and ordered to give to those gentlemen documents in my possession, relating to my testimony before this Commission.
Mr. Rankin. Did you do that?
Mr. Lane. I did not give them those documents; no.
Mr. Rankin. Why not?
Mr. Lane. Does your tone and your question indicate you think I should have given those documents to agents of the FBI?
Mr. Rankin. I would like to have you answer the question, if you would.
Mr. Lane. You decline to answer my question?
Mr. Rankin. Yes; I am examining you.
Mr. Lane. Of course, I did not give them any documents in my possession. When I deal with any agencies of the Government, I expect that they will write to me, and if they wish to secure information from me they will do that in a dignified manner. I am an attorney with an office in New York. I don't expect to be accosted in front of my house by agents of the police, Federal, State, or local authorities. Those are the actions not of a democratic society, but of a police state, and I decline to believe for one moment that we live in a society where that behavior is going to be countenanced by any members of this Commission or by counsel to this Commission.
Mr. Rankin. Did you offer to furnish them copies if they would write to you in the manner you suggested?
Mr. Lane. I suggested to those two agents that someone in the office of the Federal Bureau of Investigation might write to me and that I would respond courteously, and make available whatever information I could. I told them, also, as I told you, since I wrote a letter to you covering this entire matter on May 18th—I told them also that I had testified fully before this Commission. If they wanted to secure any information I had, they might contact the Commission. They indicated they were not interested in the Warren Commission.
Mr. Rankin. Now, to return to the tape recording——
Mr. Lane. I would like to add one more point, if I may. It is a matter which I discussed with you on the telephone 2 days ago.
Mr. Rankin. Is that in regard to the tape recording?
Mr. Lane. No; it is not.
Mr. Rankin. Can we confine ourselves to that for a bit, until we complete that. Can you tell us who else was present at the time of this tape recording of Helen Markham that you describe?
Mr. Lane. I would like to make this quite clear to you, Mr. Rankin.
I am not going to discuss any working papers in my possession. Those papers came into my possession as a result of an attorney-client relationship. The Supreme Court has written decisions regarding the sanctity of those documents. I think it is improper of you to ask questions which delve into relationship of that nature. And I think you know that the questions you are asking are improper.
Mr. Rankin. And if other people were present at the time of any such matters and disclosures, does that make any difference under the law, do you think?
Mr. Lane. Present where?
Mr. Rankin. At the time of the tape recording and the interview. That is what I am asking you.
Mr. Lane. No one else was present.
Mr. Rankin. And who did the tape recording?
Mr. Lane. Again you are delving into an area which is an improper one for you to delve into.
Representative Ford. Did you know about the tape recording being made?
Mr. Lane. I beg your pardon?
Representative Ford. Did you know about the tape recording being made?
Mr. Lane. I decline to answer that question.
Am I a defendant before this Commission, or is the Commission trying to find out who assassinated the President?
Representative Ford. We are trying to find out information about a witness before this Commission——
Mr. Lane. Well, then, call the witness before the Commission and ask the witness questions. And if the Commission—if the witness has testified contrary to what I say the witness has said, then I would suggest you do what I invited the Commission to do when this matter arose. Submit my testimony and Mrs. Markham's testimony to the U.S. attorney's office, and bring an action against both of us for perjury. And then at that trial I will present documents in my possession, and we will see who is convicted.
Representative Ford. Do you believe Mrs. Markham is an important witness in this overall matter?
Mr. Lane. I would think so.
Representative Ford. I am sure you know what she has told you.
Mr. Lane. I know what she has told me, that is correct.
Representative Ford. If there is any difference between what she told you and told this Commission, is that important?
Mr. Lane. Of course, it is important. And if there was someone representing the interests of Oswald before this Commission, there could be cross-examination, you sitting as judges could then base your decision upon the cross-examination. But you have decided instead to sit as judges and jurors and defense attorneys and prosecuting attorneys, and you are faced with a dilemma. I cannot solve that dilemma for you.
Representative Ford. In order for us to evaluate the testimony she has given us and what you allege she has given you, we must see the information which you have at your disposal.
Mr. Lane. I have told you precisely under oath what Mrs. Markham has said to me.
Mr. Rankin. Are you unwilling to verify that with the tape recording that you claim to have?
Mr. Lane. I am unable to verify that because of an existing attorney-client relationship, and you know that it would be improper and unethical for me to give the answers to the questions which you are asking. And that is why I am amazed that you persist in asking questions which you know are improper and which would be unethical for me to answer.
Mr. Rankin. And where was this tape recording made?
Mr. Lane. You have my answer to questions about that already, Mr. Rankin.
Mr. Rankin. Did you, yourself, have any conversation with Helen Markham at anytime?
Mr. Lane. Yes; I testified to that on March 4, and again today.
Representative Ford. Is this tape recording of that conversation?
Mr. Lane. Precisely.
Mr. Rankin. Can you tell us where the tape recording was made?
Mr. Lane. I can tell you, but I will not tell you.
Mr. Rankin. Do you have any other reasons for not disclosing this information to the Commission except your statement about the attorney and client relationship that you describe?
Mr. Lane. And the sanctity of working documents of an attorney. I have no other reason whatsoever.
Mr. Rankin. Mr. Lane, the Commission has asked you a number of times to disclose to it the name of the informant that you said told you about having seen certain persons in the Carousel Club. Are you ready to disclose the name of that informant now?
Mr. Lane. I am ready, but as I told you when I gave you that information at the outset, I gave my word of honor to that person that I would not disclose his name unless he gave me permission to. I have gone to Dallas on two separate occasions to try to secure that permission. I have not been able to secure that permission. Nothing would make me happier than giving you the name of that person; but I have given my word of honor and, therefore, I am unable to give you that name.
Mr. Rankin. Do you claim any attorney and client relationship with regard to the name of that informant?
Mr. Lane. I think there clearly exists an attorney-client relationship, but that is not the motivating factor in my telling you that I will not disclose the name.
Mr. Rankin. Is that the basis for your refusal to disclose the name?
Mr. Lane. Obviously if I say yes, you cannot pursue this, but I must tell you honestly that is not the reason.
Mr. Rankin. Then I ask you to disclose the name of the informant.
Mr. Lane. I cannot. I have given my word to that person that I would not disclose his name.
Mr. Rankin. You know that is no legal justification, do you not?
Mr. Lane. I know that is true. There is no legal justification. I know that I am not here under subpena. I know that you wrote to me while I was in Europe, although you have the power of subpena—you do not have the power to subpena me while I was in Europe. I know the Commission will complete its work very likely within the next 2 weeks. I could have easily remained in Europe until the Commission had completed its work.
I knew you were calling me here today in reference to that specific matter because you said so in your letter to me. So I have come here voluntarily to cooperate with the Commission to the very best of my ability, and not to rely upon any legal superstructure to protect my answers.
I told this Commission at the outset that I had given my word to this person, and I would not reveal his name. The Commission led me to believe at that time that it would honor that understanding, and the record, I think, so reveals that. If the Commission is prepared——
Mr. Rankin. You base that upon the record at that time? You base your claim that the Commission indicated that it would honor any such understanding on the record that was made on March 4, do you?
Mr. Lane. Yes; I think there is language there which indicates this. I was not pressed at that time. We discussed the matter at that time. If the Commission is at this point about to reverse its position, despite an indication that it would honor that understanding, I am myself not ready to break my honor, my commitment to that individual. I have not done that ever in the past, and I will not do that now.
Mr. Rankin. The Commission has a number of times asked you by correspondence to disclose the name of that informant, and it now asks you in this proceeding, while you are under oath, to make that disclosure.
Mr. Lane. I will not do so, Mr. Rankin.
Mr. Rankin. Do you realize that the information you gave in closed session could have an unfavorable effect upon your country's interests in connection with this assassination and your failure to disclose the name of your informant would do further injury?
Mr. Lane. Mr. Rankin. I am astonished to hear that statement from you. There are 180 million Americans in this country. I am perhaps the only one who is a private citizen who has taken off the last 6 months to devote all of his efforts to securing whatever information can be found, and to making that known to this Commission, and publicly to the people of this country at great personal cost in terms of the harassment that I have suffered, in terms of the terrible financial losses that I have suffered. And to sit here today, after 6 months of this work, which I have given all to this Commission, voluntarily, and again have come here again today voluntarily to give you this information, and to hear you say that I am not cooperating with the Commission, and I am going to do harm to the country by not making information available to you astonishes me.
You have hundreds of agents of the FBI running all over the Dallas area—agents of the Secret Service, Dallas policemen. Are you telling me that in one trip to Dallas where I spent something like 2 days, I uncovered information which the whole police force of this Nation has not yet in 6 months been able to secure? I cannot believe that is a valid assessment of this situation. I cannot, Mr. Rankin.
The Chairman. Mr. Lane, may I say to you that until you give us the corroboration that you say you have, namely, that someone told you that that was a fact, we have every reason to doubt the truthfulness of what you have heretofore told us. And your refusal to answer at this time lends further strength to that belief. If you can tell us, and if you will tell us, who gave you that information, so that we may test their veracity, then you have performed a service to this Commission. But until you do, you have done nothing but handicap us.
Mr. Lane. I have handicapped you by working for 6 months and making all of the information which I have had available to you? I understand very fully your position, Mr. Chief Justice.
Mr. Rankin. Mr. Lane, what did you come down to tell us or inform the Commission about? You say you came here of your own volition in order to help us, and to give us information. Now, what information in light of the fact that I wrote you and asked you for two specific things—whatever information you had in any recorded form concerning your interview with Helen Markham, and secondly, the name of the informant, neither of which you are willing to disclose or have said anything to help the Commission on.
Mr. Lane. I came here at your request that I interrupt my trip in Europe to come back and testify before you. And I have done that.
The Chairman. By denying—by refusing to answer either question.
Mr. Lane. I think that—well. I have given you the reasons why I cannot answer the question. With reference to Mrs. Markham, I should tell you this, that I am hopeful that in the very near future I will be able to make that document available to you by securing permission from my client. But she has informed me at the present time that she is herself involved in securing some information relative to this whole matter, which you are familiar with, Mr. Rankin, and that she wishes there to be no discussion at all at this point about this matter.
Frankly, quite frankly, matters which have been given to this Commission in utmost confidence have appeared in the daily newspapers, and one cannot feel with great security that giving information to this Commission, even at secret hearings, means that the information will not be broadcast, and this is the problem which confronts us at the present time.
The Chairman. You know, do you not, that you and other witnesses have been free to discuss their testimony before the Commission with the public, and you, yourself, have done that, and that is one of the reasons that things that were said before the Commission have been divulged. You, yourself, have discussed fully your testimony before the press and the radio and the television.
Mr. Lane. Yes; I have.
The Chairman. Other witnesses have done the same thing. No witness is under compulsion to keep his testimony secret. Naturally, some things would come out.
Mr. Lane. Well, it seems to me that when the transcript of my—the transcript of my testimony was sent to me, dealing with the portion in executive session, every page had been marked "Top Secret." In fact, it bore a legend across it saying that my testimony, which consisted almost solely at the outset of my request that the hearings be open to the public, was in fact related to the national defense of the United States and it was a violation of the espionage laws for me to discuss those matters publicly.
The Chairman. Well, Mr. Lane, you know that you came right down from your testimony, and I think in this very room, or at least on this floor of this same building, discussed your testimony with the press and the radio and the television.
Mr. Lane. Oh, I most certainly did. My testimony was open to the public. My testimony was unlike the rest of the testimony before the Commission.
The Chairman. Well, now, that is your judgment. Every witness knows that he is under no compulsion to keep his testimony secret. They have not done it. And many of them have come down here after their testimony upstairs and have appeared on radio and television and have discussed matters with the press.
Mr. Lane. Yes; I know that that may very well be so, Mr. Chief Justice. I was only making reference to matters such as the diary which has been marked Top Secret, which has been published, and the press conferences in which members of the Commission reported to the press the testimony before them.
Mr. Rankin. Mr. Lane, when I wrote you, do you recall that I offered to have the Commission pay your expenses to come back from Europe in order to testify before the Commission at this time?
Mr. Lane. Yes; you did.
Mr. Rankin. Are you asking that you be paid those expenses?
Mr. Lane. I would expect that since you made that offer that is a commitment you should keep. I would have remained in Europe; yes.
Mr. Rankin. And you did not tell me in any correspondence that you were going to take the position that you could not make this disclosure because of an attorney-client relationship, and that you were not going to give us any information about the informant at this time?
Mr. Lane. Mr. Rankin——
Mr. Rankin. Did you?
Mr. Lane. Yes; of course I told you that. I told you that on March 4, and I have told you that in every letter which you have written to me on these questions. I cannot understand how you can pretend to be surprised or plead surprise at this point based upon my position before the Commission which today, in July, is consistently the same position I took in March, and consistently the same position I took in the intervening months when I wrote to you, we exchanged correspondence, in relationship to my position.
Mr. Rankin. And you did not in answer to my letter, when I offered to pay your expenses, say that the only thing you could testify to was that there was an attorney-client relationship and you would not produce any of the records in regard to Helen Markham because of that, or you did not say that you would not give us the name of the informant because you had refused to disclose it, in answer to my letter, offering to pay your expenses. You said nothing about anything of that kind, did you?
Mr. Lane. I never received your letter. You wrote it to my New York address. I was in Europe traveling at the time. I received a phone call from my office 3 days ago stating that you had asked that I return to the United States to testify, and I immediately booked passage the next morning, which was the first plane, in order to return, and to be here before July 1, which was what your letter said. When I came back, I received a phone call from you indicating that I was not needed yesterday, but that today at 2 o'clock would be the appropriate time, and so I came here today. And I am willing to——
Mr. Rankin. Is that your answer?
Mr. Lane. Yes; of course, it is my answer. I will give you all of the information in my possession in reference to everything I have been able to discover in order to assist this Commission. But what you are asking at this point are sources. You are not asking for information. You are asking for sources. And you know that it is improper to ask for those sources.
The Chairman. Even where there is no relationship of attorney and client?
Mr. Lane. It is not improper because there is a relationship in that case. It is improper because I gave that testimony to you voluntarily on March 4, explaining to the members of this Commission that I had given my word of honor to this person not to disclose his name.
Mr. Rankin. Do you have anything else that you wish to disclose in addition to such disclosures as you now have made to the Commission in regard to the assassination of President Kennedy?
Mr. Lane. There are three additional matters which have come to my attention, which I am not at this point able to disclose because an investigation is still being conducted in Dallas. But by Monday, this coming Monday, I will be in a position to make that information available to you. In addition to that——
Mr. Rankin. Will this be in written form, signed statements and affidavits, or what will you have for this?
Mr. Lane. I don't understand your question, Mr. Rankin.
Mr. Rankin. Will you have it in any kind of a written form; the additional testimony or evidence that you refer to?
Mr. Lane. I cannot tell you that until Monday. In addition to that, as I told you when we spoke on the phone 2 days ago, and you suggested that I raise this matter before the Commission, I am deeply concerned about the fact that since I have become involved in this matter, and since I testified before this Commission, the U.S. Department of Immigration has placed my name in their immigration book, on the proscribed list, and that when I returned to this country, in response to your invitation to come here and testify before this Commission, I was halted by the immigration authorities because my name appeared in that proscribed list.
Mr. Rankin. And I told you at that time on the telephone, didn't I, that the Commission had nothing to do with that? Is that right?
Mr. Lane. You did tell me that, and I ask you if you would be good enough to find out, since I did not accuse the Commission of having my name listed there, of course—to find out if my name was listed in relationship to the inquiry which I have conducted, and the testimony that I have given to this Commission.
The Chairman. Were you prevented from entering the United States?
Mr. Lane. No; I am here now, Mr. Chief Justice, but I was stopped.
The Chairman. How long were you detained? Were you detained?
Mr. Lane. Oh, just for a few minutes.
The Chairman. How many minutes?
Mr. Lane. Oh, perhaps 5. My objection is not to the period of time.
The Chairman. What was the question asked of you?
Mr. Lane. Just to wait.
Mr. Rankin. Wasn't there something else asked of you?
Mr. Lane. Well, perhaps I should, then, tell you what happened.
Mr. Rankin. All right. You better answer that question of the Chief Justice.
The Chairman. That is a part of my question. I asked you: What did they say to you?
Mr. Lane. Well, there were three different persons. The first person was at the desk, whose name I do not recall, but as an immigration inspector said, "Kindly wait," and he returned within 5 minutes and gave me back my passport and said, "You can pass through now." So not a single question was asked of me by the immigration inspector who discovered that my name was in the proscribed book.
I, however, asked him if he could tell me why my name was in the book, and he said that it was confidential material which he could not reveal to me, and I asked him if he would be good enough to tell me the name of his superior officer so that I might discuss the matter with him. He referred me to Mr. J. J. Daley, also an immigration inspector, and Mr. Daley asked me if perhaps I had gone to Cuba, and I said to him I had never been to Cuba; I had only been out of the country where a passport was required twice in my life, both within the last 6 months. The only time prior to then I had left the country was when I was a soldier in the U.S. Army, and I was sent to Europe—not to Cuba at that time.
He said, "Well, then, I can't understand it." And I asked if I could see his superior officer. And he referred me to W. T. McArnity, who was the officer in charge. He told me that perhaps there was just some mistake made, but could give me no further information. He referred me to Mr. Espardy, who is the district director, I believe, of the Immigration Department, and Mr. Espardy said merely, "I am not going to tell you a thing." That is where the entire matter rested, and where it rests now.
Mr. Rankin. Mr. Lane, when you asked your informant if you could disclose the information that we have asked you about—and we have asked you the name of the informer—did you tell him that the Commission had indicated to you that his name would not be publicly revealed if he would allow you to disclose it to the Commission?
Mr. Lane. I most certainly did.
Mr. Rankin. And what was his response?
Mr. Lane. He wondered whether that meant his name might not be revealed anywhere—if not by the members of the Commission, perhaps somehow it might be revealed.
Mr. Rankin. Is that what he said?
Mr. Lane. That is precisely what he said.
Representative Ford. When did he tell you that?
Mr. Lane. When I spoke with him; I think it was during March or April of this year, after I testified before the Commission.
Representative Ford. Have you made any further inquiry in that regard?
Mr. Lane. Have I?
Representative Ford. Yes.
Mr. Lane. I spoke with him one more time.
Representative Ford. Since your return from Europe?
Mr. Lane. No; I just arrived 2 days ago.
Mr. Rankin. When was the last time you spoke to him about disclosing his name?
Mr. Lane. I would think it was during April of this year.
Mr. Rankin. When in April?
Mr. Lane. I don't recall the exact date. When I was last in Dallas.
Mr. Rankin. Can you give us a closer approximation than that?
Mr. Lane. I really cannot. I believe it was in April; perhaps toward the middle of April, but I am not certain.
Representative Ford. Was it by telephone?
Mr. Lane. No; I saw him in person. I went down to see him.
Representative Ford. You saw him in Dallas?
Mr. Lane. Yes; well, near Dallas.
Mr. Rankin. Do you consider, Mr. Lane, that you have cooperated with the Commission as much as you can in regard to both of these matters, Helen Markham and this informant?
Mr. Lane. Yes; I think there is no question but that I have. Frankly, when I returned to the country, I had thought that it would be not difficult for me to make available to you all the documents regarding Mrs. Markham. I had planned to do that.
(At this point, Representative Ford withdrew from the hearing room.)
Mr. Lane. I felt that I would be able to be released from the attorney-client stricture so that I could do that. It was not until after I returned that I received a phone call from Mrs. Oswald, after she called you, related this new development in relationship to the Markhams, which has at this point handicapped my being able to secure permission to release that information. I had intended to do that.
I am hopeful that in the next few days it will be possible to give you that information, as I said earlier.
The Chairman. Mr. Lane, you told us what your attorney relationship was, but, really, I did not understand it very clearly. Will you tell us what your present attorney relationship is that causes you to rely upon it in refusing to tell us about this recording that was made at the time of the conversation between you and Helen Markham?
Mr. Lane. I don't have a present attorney-client relationship in relation to that particular matter. I, at that time, had been retained by Marguerite Oswald to investigate the charges against her son and peripheral matters, and, in conformity and in furtherance of that retainer, I conducted an interview with Mrs. Markham.
The Chairman. And——
Mr. Lane. And that is one of the working documents in my possession.
The Chairman. How does that become a peripheral matter—the conversation that you had with Mrs. Markham? What does that have to do with Mrs. Oswald?
Mr. Lane. I secured that information on behalf of an attorney-client relationship when I was serving my client, Mrs. Oswald.
The Chairman. But, Mr. Lane, you at that very time, when you claimed to be, and when you were, the attorney for Mrs. Oswald, you did come here and testify concerning that conversation with Mrs. Markham.
Mr. Lane. Yes.
The Chairman. Now, if you testified concerning it then, why can't you now tell us all the circumstances surrounding that? Why is your privilege any different now than it was then?
Mr. Lane. I explained to Mrs. Oswald that I had been called to testify before the Commission as a witness, and that the information which I had secured I had secured on her behalf, and discussed with her what it is I was going to tell the Commission, and she agreed and gave me permission to testify before the Commission as I did.
The Chairman. And since that time she instructed you not to testify?
Mr. Lane. Since that time, just actually 2 days ago—or perhaps it was yesterday—she instructed me not to discuss the entire Markham situation at all, quite specifically, and quite strongly, and insistently, over my objection.
Mr. Rankin. Is it your position, then, that you have a right to disclose part of the information about the Helen Markham matter to the Commission and you don't have a duty to disclose all of it?
Mr. Lane. I think that when one has a client, one has the right, if one secures the permission of the client, to release the results of investigation while retaining the sanctity of working documents belonging to an attorney; yes.
I think there is a clear distinction.
Mr. Rankin. It is your contention you can hold back part of it so that the Commission then is not able to verify what you do tell, the part you do tell?
Mr. Lane. Well, of course——
Mr. Rankin. Is that your position?
Mr. Lane. No, and I haven't said anything, I think, even comparable to that. I said one can testify if one has permission of the client in terms of the result of an investigation conducted by a client.
Mr. Rankin. Your conclusion about the testimony? Is that what you mean?
Mr. Lane. Not my conclusion. The result of the investigation, the result of inquiry. But at the same time it does not mean that an attorney's working documents are no longer sanctified documents.
Mr. Rankin. About the same matter; is that right?
Mr. Lane. Of course, about the same matter. Yes.
Mr. Rankin. Do you know of any law to support that position?
Mr. Lane. That an attorney's working documents——
Mr. Rankin. Can be withheld about a matter that he purports to give testimony concerning?
Mr. Lane. I have not researched the question; no. Do you have law indicating that is inaccurate?
Mr. Rankin. I think it is quite inaccurate. If you come before any body, the Commission or any court, and purport to disclose part of a matter, I know of no law that permits you to withhold the rest.
Mr. Lane. Well, it is not a question of disclosing part of a matter. There is a conclusion of an investigation. For example, I assume that this Commission will report its conclusions, but they may not necessarily report every portion of the working documents before this Commission, because these are two separate areas. One is a conclusion, and one is the working documents. I have reported the conclusion, but that does not mean, in my view, that the working documents of an attorney, therefore, are no longer privileged.
Mr. Rankin. What you purported to report was what you said was her testimony in regard to these incidents, was it not?
Mr. Lane. It was not her testimony. It was a statement that she made to me.
Mr. Rankin. Her statement she made to you?
Mr. Lane. Yes.
Mr. Rankin. You purported to give that to the Commission.
Mr. Lane. I did give it to the Commission.
Mr. Rankin. And then you said you had a recording of it; is that right?
Mr. Lane. That is correct.
Mr. Rankin. And you are not——
Mr. Lane. I don't think I ever said that to the Commission.
Mr. Rankin. You are saying it now, are you not?
Mr. Lane. Yes; I am saying it now.
Mr. Rankin. And you are not willing to have the Commission have the recording to check the accuracy of your report about what the testimony or statement was, is that right?
Mr. Lane. I am not in a position to give you that document. I have said that several times; yes, sir. I don't understand why it is not possible to call Mrs. Markham and to call me and to have us confront each other. I think clearly the Commission would then secure the facts. I would be happy to participate in such a confrontation. It seems to me to be the order——
The Chairman. Wouldn't you then be violating your attorney-client privilege just the same?
Mr. Lane. No; I don't have such a privilege—a relationship at the present time. That relationship terminated, as I said, in March.
The Chairman. Well, you would freely discuss, though, the things that occurred while the attorney-client privilege did prevail, or did exist?
Mr. Lane. No; I would merely ask Mrs. Markham a series of questions.
The Chairman. Oh, yes; you would like to make the inquisition your own, but you are unwilling to testify before this Commission.
Mr. Lane. I don't think that an effort to represent a man who is being tried in absentia, after he was killed in the custody of police officers, is the same as asking for permission to conduct an inquisition, with all due respect to you, Mr. Chief Justice.
The Chairman. Mr. Lane, you have manifested a great interest in Lee Harvey Oswald and his relationship to this entire affair. According to you, Mrs. Markham made a statement that would bear upon the probability of his guilt or innocence in connection with the assassination. Mrs Markham has definitely contradicted what you have said, and do you not believe that it is in your own interest and in the interests of this country for you to give whatever corroboration you have to this Commission so that we may determine whether you or she is telling the truth?
Mr. Lane. I have given you all the information that I am permitted to give to you and to members of the Commission. I understand from Mr. Rankin that Mrs. Markham denies that she ever talked with me. Is that correct?
The Chairman. You needn't ask Mr. Rankin any questions. You won't answer the questions of this Commission, and he is not under examination by you at the present time.
Mr. Lane. I have answered questions. I spoke for about 85 pages, without a single question being put to me, because I was anxious to give to this Commission all the information in my possession.
The Chairman. Yes, but you did not give us all the information. You did not tell us that you had a recording of what Mrs. Markham said to you. Now, we ask you for verification of that conversation, because she has contradicted you. You say that you have a recording, but you refuse to give it to this Commission.
Mr. Lane. I am not in a position to give you that recording. I have made that quite plain. Because of a matter which has arisen in the last 3 or 4 days, which I was made aware of yesterday for the first time, I am not in a position to do that. Hopefully, I will be in a day or two.
The Chairman. We heard that when you were here in March—hopefully you would be able to tell us who this informant of yours was in Dallas concerning the so-called meeting between Jack Ruby and others in his nightclub. And we have been pursuing you ever since with letters and entreaties to give us that information so that we might verify what you have said, if it is a fact, or disproving it if it is not a fact. Here we pay your expenses from Europe, bring you over here, and without telling us at all that you won't answer that question, you come before the Commission and refuse to testify. Do you consider that cooperation?
Mr. Lane. Mr. Chief Justice, I believe I am the only citizen in this country who has devoted 6 months to securing information at his own expense. You talk about what it cost to go to Europe. I have gone to Europe twice, and I have paid for those trips myself. I have traveled all over this country. I have gone to Dallas five times. I have paid for those trips myself, and I am not in a position financially to do that, but I have done that to give you this information.
The Chairman. Were you getting evidence over in Europe?
Mr. Lane. No; I was discussing this case, because of the suppression in this country of the facts. I felt it important that somehow the American people be informed about what is taking place, and I found that practically the only way to inform the American people is to speak in Europe.
The Chairman. Have you charged admission for any of your speaking?
Mr. Lane. Have I charged admission?
The Chairman. Yes.
Mr. Lane. No; I have not charged admission.
The Chairman. Do you collect any money in this country at the speeches that you made?
Mr. Lane. Did I, personally, collect any money?
The Chairman. Did you have money collected?
Mr. Lane. I collected no money.
The Chairman. Did you have any money collected?
Mr. Lane. I did not.
The Chairman. Was there money collected at that meeting—at those meetings that you had?
Mr. Lane. I spoke at probably 40 different college campuses throughout the United States.
The Chairman. Was money collected at those places?
Mr. Lane. To my knowledge, at none of those meetings was money collected. At one or two or perhaps three other meetings, funds have been collected for the purpose of paying the salary of the secretary of this citizens committee of inquiry, and to pay the rent.
The Chairman. Who got the money?
Mr. Lane. The citizens committee of inquiry.
The Chairman. Who is the head of that?
Mr. Lane. I am the chairman of that.
The Chairman. Who else belongs to it?
Mr. Lane. Among others, Jessica Mitford, who is the author who wrote "The American Way of Death," a best-selling book; Sterling Hayden, who is an actor; a number of attorneys, some in California, some in New York; and a number of others. I did not know that I was going to be questioned about the makeup of the citizens committee. Otherwise, I would have brought the entire membership list.
The Chairman. I didn't intend to ask you, but we are trying to get information about these different things that you considered vital in the assassination of the President. And it is a matter of great concern to the Commission that you are unwilling to tell us about those things that you considered bear upon the guilt or innocence of Lee Harvey Oswald. And it handicaps us greatly in what we are trying to do, because of the things that you do say when you are away from the Commission, and then when you refuse to testify before us as to those very things that you discuss in public.
Mr. Lane. I have not said anything in public, Mr. Chief Justice, that I have not said first before this Commission, or at one time before this Commission.
The Chairman. But, before your audiences, do you not claim to be telling the truth and to be verifying the things that you tell them, and then when you come here you refuse to give us the verification?
Mr. Lane. When I speak before an audience, I do hold myself out to be telling the truth, just as when I have testified before this Commission I have also told the truth.
Mr. Rankin. Mr. Lane, you expressed a desire in your telegram to examine the rifle. We have that here for you to see. Let the record show that at this time the Commission is giving Mr. Lane an opportunity to examine the rifle known as Commission Exhibit No. 139.
Mr. Lane. Thank you. May I comment upon the examination?
The Chairman. Yes; you may; if you saw anything of any significance there, you may state it.
Mr. Lane. Yes. I would like to call to the attention of the Commission the affidavit signed by a police officer, Seymour Weitzman, dated the 23d day of November 1963, the original of which was at one time in the office of the district attorney of Dallas. In that document, Officer Weitzman states he found, along with another person—a deputy sheriff, I believe, or a deputy of some sort—the alleged murder weapon, on the 22d day of November 1963, on the sixth floor of the Book Depository Building.
And in that affidavit Mr. Weitzman—Officer Weitzman—swears that the murder weapon which he found, or the weapon which he found on that floor, was a Mauser 7.65 millimeters. A Mauser, of course, is a German weapon. The rifle which is before the Commission, and which is, I assume, allegedly now the murder weapon, is, of course, not a German Mauser 7.65 millimeters, but is an Italian carbine, 6.5 millimeters.
Although I am personally not a rifle expert, I was able to determine that it was an Italian carbine because printed indelibly upon it are the words "Made Italy" and "caliber 6.5." I suggest it is very difficult for a police officer to pick up a weapon which has printed upon it clearly in English "Made Italy, Cal 6.5," and then the next day draft an affidavit stating that that was in fact a German Mauser, 7.65 millimeters.
The Chairman. Very well. Anything further? We will take a short recess, then.
(Brief recess.)
The Chairman. Gentlemen, the Commission will come to order. There is nothing further at this time. The meeting is adjourned.
(Whereupon, at 3:20 p.m., the President's Commission recessed.)