Mr. Bouhe. You can say that again.

Mr. Liebeler. Why were you surprised?

Mr. Bouhe. Because I happened to know the guy.

Mr. Liebeler. Did you think that Oswald was capable of doing such a thing?

Mr. Bouhe. Never up to that moment. Did not enter my mind.

Mr. Liebeler. He did not appear to you to be a dangerous person in that respect?

Mr. Bouhe. He appeared to be critical of the United States, an individual completely mixed-up, looking, somebody said, for his place under the sun. But I did not go into the thinking like the psychiatrist thought in the Bronx in 1952, that he is potentially dangerous, and to whom now this act was almost a natural for his condition.

Mr. Liebeler. He did not appear to you prior to the assassination that he was dangerous in any respect?

Mr. Bouhe. He liked to get into a fight, I heard and get beaten up, I heard, off and on, and he struck his wife, gave her a black eye. Yes; he is a tough guy but——

Mr. Liebeler. As far as assassinating the President or shooting somebody, that's never occurred to you?