Mrs. Odio. I have heard about her, too.
Mr. Liebeler. Do you have any idea how these three men came to your apartment? Have you ever thought about it and tried to establish any contact that they might have had with someone else that would have told them to come to your apartment?
Mrs. Odio. They were coming from New Orleans.
Mr. Liebeler. They came directly from New Orleans to your apartment?
Mrs. Odio. If it was true. It is very easy to find out any Cubans in Dallas. Either you look in the phone book, or you call the Catholic Relief Service. If you say you are a friend of so and so, they will give you information enough. They will tell you where they live and what their phone number is and how to contact them.
Mr. Liebeler. But you have no actual knowledge as to how these men came by your address?
Mrs. Odio. I kind of asked them, and they told me because they knew my family. That is how they established the conversation. They knew him and wanted to help me, and knew I belonged to JURE and all this.
Mr. Liebeler. Now, can you remember anything else about the incident when Leon and the two men came to your apartment, or about the telephone call that you got from Leopoldo, that you haven't already told me about?
Mrs. Odio. No. If I have forgotten something, but I think all the important things I have told you, like the trip, that they were leaving for a trip. And this struck me funny, because why would they want to meet me, if they were leaving for some reason or purpose. And it has been a long time. You don't think about these things every day and I am trying real hard to remember everything I can.
Mr. Liebeler. Now, is there anything else that you think we should know about that we haven't already asked you about in connection with this whole affair?