Mr. De Mohrenschildt. No; I don't think so. I don't remember that.
Possibly he told somebody else. But not in my presence.
Mr. Jenner. Did he express any view to you or did you get the impression that these people in this colony or group, they only liked money, and everything was measured by money?
Mr. De Mohrenschildt. Well, naturally—he didn't tell that to me, but you can guess that that would be his opinion, because he was jealous of them. I tried to induce him a few times to get on to some money-making scheme. I said, "Why don't you do something to make money?"
But, obviously, it wasn't interesting to him.
Would you like me to say what I told you about this Solidarist?
Mr. Jenner. Yes.
Mr. De Mohrenschildt. You were interested—you asked me if I belonged to some political party, and I said no. This group of Russian refugees called themselves solidarists. And Mr. and Mrs. Voshinin in Dallas belonged to that group and tried to make me join it. Not being interested, I refused, but I read some of their publications. And it is a pro-American group of Russian refugees who have an economic doctrine of their own. And they seem to have some people working in the Soviet Union for them, and all that sort of thing.
It is a pretty well-known political party that—their headquarters is in Germany.
That is about all I know about them.