Mr. Jenner. Yes; that is your letter, and you dispatched it?
Mr. De Mohrenschildt. Yes.
Mr. Jenner. Now, you say in that letter, after expressing your sympathies to Mrs. Auchincloss, and your very kind comments about Mrs. Kennedy, "I do hope that Marina and her children (I understand she has two now) will not suffer too badly throughout their lives, and that the stigma will not affect the innocent children. Somehow, I still have a lingering doubt, notwithstanding all the evidence, of Oswald's guilt."
Mr. De Mohrenschildt. Exactly.
Mr. Jenner. Now, please explain that remark in that letter.
Mr. De Mohrenschildt. Unless the man is guilty, I will not be his judge—unless he is proven to be guilty by the court, I will not be his judge, and there will be always a doubt in my mind, and throughout my testimony I explained sufficiently why I have those doubts. And mainly because he did not have any permanent animosity for President Kennedy. That is why I have the doubts.
Mr. Jenner. And that expression in this letter is based on all the things you have told me about in this long examination?
Mr. De Mohrenschildt. Yes.
Mr. Jenner. A natural, I would assume, view on the part of any humanitarian person—that you just cannot imagine anybody murdering anybody else?
Mr. De Mohrenschildt. Yes.