Mr. Pena. I don't remember seeing him there. I remember the day I applied for my passport there were a lot of people from—I don't know from where, India or Africa. You know, colored people. There were some people there. They were seamen or something, and one American girl got all of those colored people. She was helping all of them that day. A bunch of people there, colored people.

Mr. Liebeler. You have no recollection of seeing Oswald there at that time?

Mr. Pena. No.

Mr. Liebeler. As far as you know, you never saw Oswald at any time other than that time you saw him in your bar?

Mr. Pena. No.

Mr. Liebeler. He never had any conversation with you; is that correct?

Mr. Pena. Not that I recall.

Mr. Liebeler. Have any other Federal agencies besides the FBI interviewed you?

Mr. Pena. You see, before, they used to go there and say, "We are from the Federal Bureau," and would just talk to them. I didn't know what agency. I never took no one's name or anything until later my lawyer told me, "Every time you talk to one of these men, get their name, where they come from." That was very, very much later. Before, they would just come around and tell me that they are asking me many things about people that was for Castro. When you got a barroom, especially in Spanish like I got—most of my customers are Spanish seamen, foreign seamen—you hear the way they talk, and before, as I was against Batista—most of the people here for Castro, really for Castro—they was going to my place. So when I joined the organization against Castro in New Orleans, one of the agents of the FBI, De Brueys, started going to my place very, very often asking me about many different people, Spanish people, what I knew, what I thought. I told him what I knew; that some people was for Castro and some people was against. I told him what I saw. I never did ask him what he found out about those people.

Mr. Liebeler. Sometimes you would call the FBI and give them information, too; is that correct?