Mr. Jenner. Very demanding of his mother?

Mr. Evans. Yes; he was.

Mr. Jenner. What other impressions did you have of this boy?

Mr. Evans. Well, I thought he was a psycho. I really did. He was so young to be acting the way he did. Of course, there is no doubt that his mother really spoiled him. She would do just about anything he wanted, if it was possible to be done, like giving him money or anything like that, and I understand that he was the cause of his mother's divorce from Ekdahl. Ekdahl said that Lee was more demanding of his mother than he was, and he was her husband.

Mr. Jenner. You had the impression that Lee came between her and Mr. Ekdahl?

Mr. Evans. Yes, sir.

Mr. Jenner. Give me your impression of Marguerite Oswald.

Mr. Evans. Marguerite?

Mr. Jenner. Yes.

Mr. Evans. I think she's a fine woman, myself, a fine woman; intelligent, very soft spoken—a beautiful woman, with black hair streaked with a little gray, but when you saw her on television since this thing happened, she really looked awful; nothing at all like she used to look. She has really aged. She looked like a charwoman, compared to what she used to look like. She used to be a fashion plate. She dressed beautifully, but when we saw her on television just recently, after all this happened, she looked awful. There's no other way to describe it, the change that has come over her. You wouldn't have recognized her if they hadn't told you who she was; she looked that different. Where her hair used to be black, now it's entirely gray, and she really looks old.