Mr. Frazier. All right, sir.

Mr. Hubert. Now, I hand you another document which I have marked for—"Dallas, Tex., March 25, 1964, Exhibit 5087, deposition of W. B. Frazier." I have signed my name to the bottom of this document which purports to be a report by Special Agent Melton L. Newsom of the FBI, of a conversation which he had over the telephone with you on November 24, 1963, at about 3:20 a.m., and I'll ask you if that report by Mr. Newsom of that conversation is a correct report of that conversation?

Mr. Frazier. No, sir; I don't believe it is.

Mr. Hubert. Would you indicate what parts are correct and what parts are wrong?

Mr. Frazier. Now, you are asking of my own knowledge, is that correct?

Mr. Hubert. Yes, sir.

Mr. Frazier. Now, this first paragraph here, I know nothing of this. Mr. Glassup. He didn't talk to me.

Mr. Hubert. No; I think the——

Mr. Frazier. And, he received the call I understand here, and it goes into, "I represent a committee that—it is neither right nor left wing," and so forth. I didn't get all that in the conversation with Newsom, that I recall. Newsom told me that a group of men, I believe he indicated a hundred or two were going to kill Oswald the following day, the day after the night—or, you know, the next day or two. Now, that was essentially what he told me.

Mr. Hubert. Do you say he didn't tell you that had been received by Glassup?