Mr. Rankin. And who would that be?
Secretary Dillon. Lee Harvey Oswald.
Mr. Rankin. Do you know of any evidence in regard to any connection between Jack Ruby and Lee Harvey Oswald?
Secretary Dillon. No, no.
Mr. Rankin. Is there anything that you would like to call to the attention of the Commission at this time that we should know or that we should cover?
Secretary Dillon. No; I think we have covered my area of competence pretty thoroughly this morning. I can't think of anything else.
The Chairman. Mr. Dulles?
Mr. Dulles. Doug, in the field that in the Commission here we have described as the preventive intelligence field; that is, trying to identify beforehand the individuals or the type of individuals who might be a danger to the President, have you ever thought of any possible division of responsibility and of work between the Secret Service and the FBI to define more clearly which each should do in that field?
Secretary Dillon. Well, my own feeling is that the agency that handles the actual work of deciding who the individuals are that the Secret Service should watch out for, which is the PRS, would function much better and would strengthen the Service if it works as it does now as part of the whole Secret Service operation, and working very closely with the people who are on the White House detail and not having to be involved in a liaison operation somewhere else.
So I think our problem is to strengthen this PRS, and I think that this long-range plan is a good beginning.