Mr. Liebeler. After you saw these kids at this big pickup on Friday or Saturday, did you ever see any of them again after that?

Mr. Andrews. No; still looking for them. They owe me a fee.

Mr. Liebeler. They are always the hardest ones to find.

Mr. Andrews. They usually pay. They are screwed in.

Mr. Liebeler. What did Oswald say to you about his own citizenship status? You say that he mentioned that the second time he came back. What did he talk to you about in that regard?

Mr. Andrews. They came in usually after hours, about 5, 5:15, and as I recall, he had alleged that he had abandoned his citizenship. He didn't say how; he didn't say where. I assumed that he was one of the people who wanted to join The Free World and—I represented one or two of them. They had belonged to The World Citizenship—I explained to him there are certain steps he had to do, such as taking an oath of loyalty to a foreign power, voting in a foreign country election, or some method that is recognized defectively as loss of citizenship. Then I told him, "Your presence in the United States is proof you are a citizen. Otherwise, you would be an alien with an alien registration with a green card, form 990."

Mr. Liebeler. Had he told you he had been out of the country?

Mr. Andrews. Yes.

Mr. Liebeler. Did he tell you where he had gone?

Mr. Andrews. No.