Mr. Bringuier. Right.
Mr. Liebeler. He is now Ambassador to the United Nations?
Mr. Bringuier. In New York; right.
Mr. Liebeler. Fernandez is the person who was the Castro spy who had infiltrated the training camp in Louisiana?
Mr. Bringuier. For the Christian Democratic Movement here in Louisiana.
Mr. Liebeler. Now the Christian Democratic Movement is—what? Pro-Castro?
Mr. Bringuier. Anti-Castro.
Mr. Liebeler. It is an anti-Castro organization?
Mr. Bringuier. Yes; they were training Cubans over here to make a commando action against Castro, but they find out that there was a Castro spy inside the training camp, and they went back to Miami with the people and with him, and they turn him over to the FBI. I think that after that the leader for the Christian Democratic Movement—or that the FBI didn't found nothing, because was not against the law to spy inside an anti-Castro organization. It was against the law to spy inside the U.S. Government but not inside the anti-Castro organization. And my feeling—and this is the question that I am asking myself—in New Orleans we are about 900 miles from Miami. In Miami is where the headquarters of all the anti-Castro groups. I could not find any reason for Oswald to come to me and offer me his service to train Cubans in guerrilla warfare at the same moment when there was a secret anti-Castro training camp in New Orleans and a Castro spy was inside that training camp. That for me is—because, if he was willing to infiltrate one active organization, he will go directly to Miami and he will offer his service over there in Miami, but not in New Orleans where it is not publicly known that there was something going on at that moment. I believe that that was the only time here in New Orleans that there was something like that, and it was a coincidence. And there is another coincidence too for me, and that is that when Oswald left the city he went to Mexico, and the letter from Fernandez that was intercepted here was to Mexico too, and Oswald visit the Cuban consulate in Mexico, and the Fernandez letter was to the Cuban Ambassador to Mexico. For me, that is a big doubt.
Mr. Liebeler. Go ahead.