Mr. Martin. No. Although I have wondered about it since.
Mr. Redlich. Since when, Mr. Martin?
Mr. Martin. Well, this whole thing, since I got into it. This whole thing seems to me like I have been kind of made a patsy. Robert Oswald wouldn't take her in right after this incident because he was afraid of what might happen, might or might not happen.
The Fords also expressed the same opinion.
Mr. Dulles. What do you mean by the same opinion?
Mr. Martin. That they wouldn't have taken her in at first. Mr. Ford expressed the opinion that he was afraid of what the public reaction might be and he didn't know what to think.
We took her in with the full knowledge that anything could happen, and anything might happen, and it was done strictly on an altruistic basis at first, and then this manager thing came in which I wish it hadn't at all.
But be that as it may, it has happened, and things have been turned upside down.
But then as soon as the Secret Service was pulled off then Robert insisted that she move from my home to his home, and start proceedings to cancel the contracts that are in existence. She was up there—she came back to the doctor on a Tuesday after she left our home, and stopped in at the house and said she wanted to come back to live with us.
Mr. Dulles. When was this approximately? Just after she moved to the Fords or how long after she moved?