Mr. Jenner. Is this old guard group a group that would be inclined to believe that if an American went to Russia and came back with a Russian wife, that that necessarily would mean that he must have had some connections of some kind with the Communists in order to get a Russian wife out of Russia?

Mr. De Mohrenschildt. That is an interesting question. They might believe anything, because they think that the Russians are such devils that they would go to any extent of diabolical combinations to do something like that.

Mr. Jenner. Now, among the Russian emigre group in Dallas, did you ever know of anybody that you even thought might be a Communist?

Mr. De Mohrenschildt. Not a single one.

Mr. Jenner. Or have any leanings toward communism?

Mr. De Mohrenschildt. No; no leanings even. I am probably the most leftest of them all.

Mr. Jenner. And you do not——

Mr. De Mohrenschildt. And as you know, I am not a member of any party.

Mr. Jenner. And you do not regard yourself as a Communist?

Mr. De Mohrenschildt. No. Not only do I not regard—I just am not. But I am probably the only one who has been in the Communist country, because of my job with ICA, and also, I forgot to tell you that I had visited Poland in 1958, after my job with ICA. I went to visit Poland, as a tourist, to see what happened to my ex-country. I just went there for a period of 10 days, to Warsaw, and then went to Sweden from there, and then returned back to the States.