Mr. Gregory. Yes. I could tell you—this is a personal opinion—but evidently she was kind of a rebel or nonconformist herself, and she met quite a bit of opposition because she did see Lee. And I am not sure, but I believe her family gave her quite a bit of trouble about that, too.

Mr. Liebeler. Can you remember any specific situation that she may have said about that?

Mr. Gregory. All I know is that when she returned—she said she had written her relatives—she had an uncle and aunt and sister, and they refused to answer, and she never received an answer from them.

Mr. Liebeler. Now, did you infer from that that they gave her difficulty in connection with her marriage to Lee Oswald, or that they disapproved her decision to come to the United States?

Mr. Gregory. I assume it was both. It is an assumption on my part.

Mr. Liebeler. Marina never indicated specifically any difficulty that she had with her relatives?

Mr. Gregory. No.

Mr. Liebeler. Did you form any opinion, or did Marina ever indicate to you that possibly she married Oswald to get out of the Soviet Union?

Mr. Gregory. No; I don't believe so.

Mr. Liebeler. And you never formed that opinion?