Mr. Jenner. You have given me a file and it is entitled "George De Mohrenschildt". I have been browsing through it. It seems to relate almost exclusively to the Haitian venture, and I don't see anything else in it.

Mr. Raigorodsky. Here is a letter of June 30 that must have been left here.

Mr. Jenner. Is this June 30, 1963, or 1962?

Mr. Raigorodsky. It must be 1963—yes, it is 1963.

Mr. Jenner. If this was June of 1963, this was before the events of November 22—I gather from your first sentence of this letter that he had been in Dallas?

Mr. Raigorodsky. After this—that's right; I see it is 1963, after this fiasco here, then he came back to Dallas—which I was called on.

Mr. Jenner. Now, the "fiasco here in Dallas" I take it from your testimony, was the suit brought by De Mohrenschildt against his wife Didi, and that suit was brought in Philadelphia and it had to do with the disposition of a corpus residue of a trust established for George's son.

As I recall, friends of the Sharples family appealed to you, or maybe sued directly, to see what you could do to help out?

Mr. Raigorodsky. No; friends of her family.

Mr. Jenner. Friends of her family?