Mr. Jenner. I want to give you an opportunity to explain that fully.
Mr. De Mohrenschildt. No; I have no information whatsoever, except what you hear now living in Port-au-Prince from the foreigners who read foreign papers. And, of course, they are all of the opinion that Oswald did not kill the President, that there was a plot, that there was—that somebody else was standing on the bridge, there was a car there on the bridge from where they were shooting, that there were four shots—and all those things are discussed all day long in Haiti right now, in the colony of foreigners—Embassy people and businessmen who live in Haiti, most of them Europeans, of course. They discuss it all day long.
Mr. Jenner. And they are confining their judgment to what they read in the papers they receive from their homeland?
Mr. De Mohrenschildt. Purely; yes—purely. As you know, there are sensational articles being published right now in Europe on that subject.
Mr. Jenner. Mr. De Mohrenschildt, you know of no supposed facts that you have read in these foreign language newspapers, do you?
Mr. De Mohrenschildt. Do I know what?
Mr. Jenner. You don't know if there is any merit one way or another?
Mr. De Mohrenschildt. No; I don't know of any merit one way or the other.
Mr. Jenner. And this remark of yours in the letter to Mrs. Auchincloss was not intended to imply that?
Mr. De Mohrenschildt. No, no; it was not. It was purely based on whatever was expressed in my testimony. And I think it will be fair to say that I will have that lingering doubt for the rest of my life.