Mr. Griffin. You mentioned, I think, Mrs. Rich, that you were going to use a boat to transport the guns to Cuba and the people back.
Mrs. Rich. That’s correct.
Mr. Griffin. Where was this boat located?
Mrs. Rich. From what I understood; in Miami.
Mr. Griffin. What kind of a boat was it?
Mrs. Rich. I don’t know. I was under the impression it might have been an old picket boat.
Mr. Griffin. What gave you that impression?
Mrs. Rich. Just the talk about it. I kind of got the impression that it might have been one that had been—you know how the Coast Guard and the Navy would sell them off sometime.
Mr. Griffin. Had Dave Cherry been a friend of your husband’s?
Mrs. Rich. No; I don’t believe so. I do not know who his friends were when he was in Dallas. Eddie Brawner and Youngblood were. Eddie Brawner could probably tell you more on this than I could; because my husband talked to him and wanted to go on the boat with him. He and Eddie used to race stock cars and stuff. And he told me—my husband claimed he used to work for Herb Noble in Dallas. There is something else. And Al Meadows. Al Meadows claimed he never saw him. He is another underworld character—back there in prohibition. And they used to run an Oklahoma gin. My husband claimed he was the only one alive who knew who gunned Herb Noble down, and that he never told. And I don’t know if it is true. Eddie Brawner was supposed to be in on this with him. I think he told Eddie all about this, more than I knew.