Mr. Pena. No.
Mr. Liebeler. Did you see Oswald clearly enough to be absolutely sure in your mind that it was Oswald in the bar?
Mr. Pena. Yes.
Mr. Liebeler. Did you ever see this Cuban-looking man that was with him at any other time or any other place?
Mr. Pena. No. See, after—that was before the assassination of Mr. Kennedy—there was an incident in my place. Two guys came. They said they were Mexican. They didn't look like Mexicans. They looked more like Cubans. They came to my place. I got a bongo with a chain. I got two bongoes for the people to play that with the music. I got a chain because I lose one of them one time. Maybe some guy was drunk. That's why I put a chain on it so they can't take it away. I was fixing the bongo on that day and they came in. They came to see me. They said, "That's what you have to have here in this country, a chain?" I was mad because one of the customers broke the bongo. I said, "What you mean by that?" When I got mad, I got a little bit—I don't know—aggressive by the way I speak. So I told them, "What you mean by that?" They said, "Well, in this country you have to put a chain?" I said, "That's so they don't take the bongo away." They said, "This is a democratic country?" I said, "Where you come from?" He said, "I come from Mexico." I said, "Don't tell me about Mexico; you take a car to Mexico, they steal the four wheels away." So right away they saw me mad, so they left, so I called the—I think I called the FBI and told them about it. I told them where they walk, which way they walked. They say, "If they come back to your place, call us again." I just forgot about it. I never saw them no more.
Mr. Liebeler. Did you call the FBI yourself, do you remember that?
Mr. Pena. Yes, sir.
Mr. Liebeler. Why did you call the FBI about these men?
Mr. Pena. I don't like it, the way they were, the way they spoke about the country here, so—I didn't like it, so I called the FBI.
Mr. Liebeler. And the FBI told you if they came back——