Mr. Liebeler. So far as you know Mr. Bouhe had no more contact with the Oswalds after that?

Mrs. Ford. No; I don't think so.

Mr. Liebeler. Did you have any conversation with any of your friends in Dallas or Fort Worth on the question of Oswald's ability to leave Russia and come back to the United States and bring Marina with him?

Mrs. Ford. We didn't speculate on that until really later, until now, after the assassination that subject came up, and people asking why they left so soon. He was telling me it took them a year, so I don't know.

Mr. Liebeler. Was there any conversation prior to the assassination, during this period in 1962, any speculation as to whether Oswald might be an agent of any government?

Mrs. Ford. No. I frankly didn't think he was capable of it. That was my feeling on it.

Mr. Liebeler. Were there any conversations on that?

Mrs. Ford. No. There were not.

Mr. Liebeler. Do you remember that Mr. Bouhe suggested at one time that Oswald was a mental case?

Mrs. Ford. Mr. Bouhe, he might have; yes, I think we all thought that.