Mr. Johnson. Well, I supplied it in the office of John Abt to the representative of the FBI at the time, in the presence of my attorney, John Abt, and it was supplied to the FBI agent who came, and I assume was conducting the investigation on behalf of the Commission at the time.
Mr. Rankin. Now, before you supplied that material to this FBI agent, did you make any search of files to determine what information, correspondence or records you had in regard to Lee Harvey Oswald?
Mr. Johnson. Oh, yes. Very extensive. We went through every bit of the office.
Mr. Rankin. Did you do that yourself or have it done under your supervision and direction?
Mr. Johnson. I did it myself.
Mr. Rankin. How large a search was that? I would like to establish how complete, if I can.
Mr. Johnson. I will admit the files are not exactly in an organized fashion. It's—it was material in which there were a lot of other letters and things like that. So I went through these files several times.
Mr. Rankin. Yourself?
Mr. Johnson. All the files, back and forth.
Mr. Rankin. You did that yourself?