Mr. Liebeler. He is a sort of a—what—engineer, plant engineer?
Mr. Le Blanc. Yes; he is the plant engineer.
Mr. Liebeler. You never mentioned to Oswald the misspellings in the words that——
Mr. Le Blanc. No; I didn't mention misspelling. I figured, well, maybe the boy can't spell so good, and I figured, well, as long as it was close, I might be able to understand it, but there was a couple of occasions he would put things down and I would have to actually ask him what it was, because it wasn't nowhere near the name that the machine would actually be.
Mr. Liebeler. And you noticed that sometimes he would spell things right and sometimes he would just spell them wrong?
Mr. Le Blanc. Sometimes he would spell them wrong and sometimes he would spell them right. That is what I couldn't understand about him.
Mr. Liebeler. Did you ever discuss that with Mr. Barbe or anybody?
Mr. Le Blanc. No; when Mr. Barbe noticed it was the day after the assassination when the agent was there and we were trying to get all the possible information we could get off of it, you know, and that is when we got the greasing records of when he was there and went through them, and that is when he seen a lot of misspelling.
Mr. Liebeler. Do you know whether those records were turned over to the Secret Service or the FBI?
Mr. Le Blanc. Yes; they were turned over.