Mr. Liebeler. Do you have any information that would lead you to believe that there was a relationship between these two men?
Mr. O'Sullivan. Only that when all of this broke with Oswald, I went through all of the old CAP files that were available, trying to get some information for the Secret Service, the people who had called me up at home, and——
Mr. Liebeler. Where were these files located?
Mr. O'Sullivan. These files are in the possession of one Robert Boylston.
Mr. Liebeler. Who was he?
Mr. O'Sullivan. He was also a member of the CAP at the time we all were, at New Orleans.
Mr. Liebeler. How did the records come to be in his possession?
Mr. O'Sullivan. He is a senior member now. He has maybe recently dropped out, but he was a senior member and these records were just turned over to him in the whole filing cabinet. They are all old records. I am trying to get the thing straight in my mind. Of course, I have been trying to get it straight in my mind, just what I know and what I have heard. It gets kind of confusing when you read so much. Sometimes you remember things that you don't really remember, you know.
Mr. Liebeler. Did you find anything in these files that related to Ferrie or Oswald?
Mr. O'Sullivan. Well, we found papers signed by Ferrie but nothing in relation to Oswald. His name wasn't mentioned in anything at all that we could find, so we assumed at that time that Oswald was in the Moisant squadron. I believe they even had in the paper the dates, and we checked those particular dates and it turned out that Ferrie was in a transition between the New Orleans squadron and the Moisant squadron in these dates, so he could have been involved either way with Oswald. I don't know if he was involved, he could have been.