Representative Boggs. During the weeks and months prior to the assassination—and I think this question has also been asked—did you ever at any time hear your late husband express any hostility towards President Kennedy?
Mrs. Oswald. No.
Representative Boggs. What motive would you ascribe to your husband in killing President Kennedy?
Mrs. Oswald. As I saw the documents that were being read to me, I came to the conclusion that he wanted in any—by any means, good or bad, to get into history. But now that I have heard a part of the translation of some of the documents, I think that there was some political foundation to it, a foundation of which I am not aware.
Representative Boggs. By that, do you mean that your husband acted in concert with someone else?
Mrs. Oswald. No, only alone.
Representative Boggs. You are convinced that his action was his action alone, that he was influenced by no one else?
Mrs. Oswald. Yes, I am convinced.
Representative Boggs. Did you consider your husband a Communist?
Mrs. Oswald. He told me when we were in New Orleans that he was a Communist, but I didn't believe him, because I said, "What kind of a Communist are you if you don't like the Communists in Russia?"