Mr. Jenner. Your present wife?
Mr. Taylor. Oh, I'm sorry. That was Mr. De Mohrenschildt's daughter that I married on that date. We married on September 28, 1963.
Mr. Jenner. Have you had any correspondence from either of the De Mohrenschildts in which there have been any allusions to the assassination of President Kennedy or to either of the Oswalds?
Mr. Taylor. I have not personally received any correspondence at all from them. My parents have received correspondence from them—none of which mentioned—I take that back—in one case, the assassination was mentioned in passing; and the Oswalds were not mentioned in specifics.
Mr. Jenner. I take it, your parents are acquainted with the De Mohrenschildts?
Mr. Taylor. Yes.
Mr. Jenner. And does that acquaintance go back prior to your acquaintance with the De Mohrenschildts?
Mr. Taylor. No; that acquaintance was after Alex and I got married.
Mr. Jenner. I see. All right. Now, we have had some discussions off the record. I will ask you first—is there anything you would like to add that occurs to you that you think might be helpful—as an occurrence having taken place or even general thoughts on your part—to the Commission in this important investigation it has undertaken?
Mr. Taylor. Well, the only thing that occurred to me was that—uh—and I guess it was from the beginning—that if there was any assistance or plotters in the assassination that it was, in my opinion, most probably the De Mohrenschildts.