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The Interrogation of Oswald
by The Dallas Police Department
I have typed the following from a 12 page report
released by the Dallas Police Department. Each of
the pages is stamped: "Photoreproduction from
Dallas Municipal Archives and Records Center City of Dallas, Texas"
The bulk of the report was typed, but in some places
handwritten words were included in margins and
the final placing indicated by arrows. In those
cases, I have placed the words where the arrows
indicated. Likewise, when hand-drawn arrows
indicate a different placing of typewritten words,
I have made that change. In a few places there was
shorthand -- most of which had been "X-ed" out.
I do not read shorthand, and have assumed that
material was included in the typing or was
disregarded. The margins in the file here are
not exact with the report I am reproducing.
No name is included as the report's author,
but it must Captain Fritz.
- Deanie Richards
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INTERROGATION OF LEE HARVEY OSWALD
We conducted the investigation at the Texas School Book
Depository Building on November 22, 1963, immediately
after the President was shot and after we had found the
location where Lee Harvey Oswald had done the shooting
from and left three empty cartridge cases on the floor and
the rifle had been found partially hidden under some boxes
near the back stairway. These pieces of evidence were pro-
tected until the Crime Lab could get pictures and make a
search for fingerprints. After Lt. Day, of the Crime Lab,
had finished his work with the rifle, I picked it up and
found that it had a cartridge in the chamber, which I ejected.
About this time some officer came to me and told me that Mr.
Roy S. Truly wanted to see me, as one of his men had left the
building. I had talked to Mr. Truly previously, and at that time
he thought everyone was accounted for who worked in the
building. Mr. Truly then came with another officer and told
me that a Lee Harvey Oswald had left the building. I asked
if he had an address where this man lived, and he told me
that he did, that it was in Irving at 2515 W. 5th Street.
I then left the rest of the search of the building with Cheif [sic]
Lumpkin and other officers who were there and told Dets. R.M.
Sims and E.L. Boyd to accompany me to the City Hall where we
could make a quick check for police record and any other infor-
mation of value, and we would then go to Irving, Texas, in an
effort to apprehend this man. While I was in the building, I was
told that Officer J.D. Tippit had been shot in Oak Cliff. Immed-
iately after I reached my office, I asked the officers who had
brought in a prisoner from the Tippit shooting who the man
was who shot the officer.
They told me his name was Lee Harvey Oswald, and I replied that
that was our suspect in the President's killing. I instructed the
officers to bring this man into the office after talking to the offi-
cers for a few minutes and in the presence of Officers R.M. Sims
and E.L. Boyd of Homicide Bureau, and possibly some Secret Ser-
vice men. Just as I had started questioning this man, I received
a call from Gordon Shanklin, Agent in Charge of the FBI office
here in Dallas, who asked me to let him talk to Jim Bookhout, one
of his agents. He told Mr. Bookhout, that he would like for James
P. Hosty to sit in on this interview as he knew about these people
and had been investigating them before. I invited Mr. Bookhout
and Mr. Hosty in to help with the interview.
After some questions about this man's full name I asked him if he
worked for the Texas School Book Depository, and he told me he
did. I asked him which floor he worked on, and he said usually on the
second floor, but sometimes his work took him to all the different
floors. I asked him what part of the building he was in at the time
the President was shot, and he said that he was having his lunch
about that time on the first floor. Mr. Truly had told me that one of
the police officers had stopped this man immediately after the shoot-
ing somewhere near the back stairway, so I asked Oswald where he
was when the police officer stopped him. He said he was on the second
floor drinking a coca cola when the officer came in. I asked him why
he left the building, and he said there was so much excitement he
didn't think there would be any more work done that day, and that as
this company wasn't particular about their hours, that they did not
punch a clock, and that he thought it would be just as well that he
left for the rest of the afternoon. I asked him if he owned a rifle, and he said he did not. He
said that he had seen one at the building a few days ago, and that Mr.
Truly and some of the employees were looking at it. I asked him
where he went to when he left work, and he told me that he had a
room on 1026 North Beckley, that he went over there and changed
his trousers and got his pistol and went to the picture show. I asked
him why he carried his pistol, and he remarked "You know how boys
do when they have a gun, they just carry it."
Mr. Hosty asked Oswald if he had been to Russia. He told him, "Yes,
he had been to Russia for three years." He asked him if he had writ-
ten to the Russian Embassy, and he said he had. This man became
very upset and arrogant with Agent Hosty, when he questioned him
and accused him of accosting his wife two different times. When
Agent Hosty attempted to talk to this man, he would hit his fist on
the desk. I asked Oswald what he meant by accosting his wife when
he was talking to Mr. Hosty. He said Mr. Hosty mistreated his wife
two different times when he talked with her, practically accosted
her. Mr. Hosty also asked Oswald is he had been to Mexico City,
which he denied. During this interview he told me that he had gone
to school in New York and in Fort Worth, Texas, that after going
into the Marines, finished his high school education. I asked him
if he won any medals for rifle shooting in the Marines. He said he
won the usual medals.
I asked him what his political beliefs were, and he said he had none,
but that he belonged to the Fair Play for Cuba Committee and told
me that they had headquarters in New York, and that he had been
Secretary for this organization in New Orleans when he lived
there. He also said that he supports the Castro Revolution. One of
the officers had told me that he had rented the room on Beckly [sic]
under the name of O.H. Lee. I asked him why he did this. He said the
did it. She didn't understand his name correctly.
Oswald asked if he was allowed an attorney, and I told him he could
have any attorney he liked, and that the telephone would be avail-
able to him up in the jail and he could
call anyone he wished. I believe it was during this interview that he
first expressed a desire to talk to Mr. Abdt [sic], an attorney in
New York. Interviews on this day were interrupted by showups
where witnesses identified Oswald positively as the man who killed
Officer Tippit, [ several words unreadable and some readable have
been written in the top margin, and an arrow points to placement
elsewhere in the document ] .... and the time that I would have to talk
to another witness or to some of the officers. One of these showups
was held at 4:35 PM and the next one at 6:30 PM, and at 7:55 PM.
At 7:05 PM I signed a complaint before Bill Alexander of the District
Attorney's office, charging Oswald with the Tippit murder. At 7:10 PM
Tippit [sic] was arraigned before Judge David Johnston. During the
second day interviews I asked Oswald about a card that he had in his
purse showing that he belonged to the Fair Play for Cuba Committee,
which he admitted was his. I asked him about another identification
card in his pocket bearing the name Alex Hidell. He said he picked
up that name in New Orleans while working in the Fair Play for
Cuba organization. He said he spoke Russian, that he corresponded
with people in Russia, and that he received newspapers from Russia.
I showed the rifle to Marina Oswald, and she could not positively
identify it, but said that it looked like the rifle that her husband had
and that he had been keeping it in the garage at Mrs. Paine's home in
Irving. After this I questioned Oswald further about the rifle, but he
denied owning a rifle at all, and said that he did have a small rifle
some years past. I asked him if he owned a rifle in Russia, and he
said, "You know you can't buy a rifle in Russia, you can only buy
shotguns." "I had a shot-gun in Russia, and hunted some while
there. [ no end quote mark included ] Marina Oswald had told me
that she thought her husband might have brought the rifle from
New Orleans, which he denied. He told me that he had some things
stored in a garage at Mrs. Paine's home in Irving, and that he had
a few personal effects at his room on Beckley. I instructed officers
to make a thorough search of both of these places.
After reviewing all of the evidence pertaining to the killing of
President Kennedy before District Attorney Henry Wade and his
Assistant, Bill Alexander, and Jim Allen, Former Asst. District
Attorney of Dallas County, I signed a complaint before the Dis-
trict Attorney charging Oswald with the murder of President
Kennedy. This was at 11:26 PM. He was arraigned before Judge
David Johnston at 1:35 AM, November 23, 1963. Oswald was
placed in jail about 12:00 midnight and brought from the jail
for arraignment before Judge David Johnston at 1:36 AM [ the
times noted -1:35 and then 1:36 are in the document ]
On November 23 at 10:25 AM Oswald was brought from the jail
for an interview. Present at this time was FBI agent Jim Bookhout,
Forrest Sorrells, special agent and in charge of Secret Service,
United States Marshall Robert Nash, and Homicide officers. During
this interview I talked to Oswald about his leaving the building, and
he told me he left by bus and rode to a stop near home and walked on
to his house. At the time of Oswald's arrest he had a bus transfer in
his pocket. He admitted this was given to him by the bus driver
when he rode the bus after leaving the building. One of the officers
told me that a cab driver, William Wayne Whaley, thought he had
recognized Oswald's picture as the man who had gotten in his cab
near the bus station and rode to Beckley Avenue. I asked Oswald if
he had ridden a cab on that day, and he said, "Yes, I did ride in the
cab. The bus I got on near where I work got into heavy traffic and
was traveling too slow, and I got off and caught a cab." I asked him
about his conversation with the cab driver, and he said he remem-
bered that when he got in the cab a lady came up who also wanted
a cab, and he told Oswald to tell the lady to "take another cab."
We had found from the investigation the day before that when Oswald
left home, he was carrying a long package. He usually went to see his
wife on week ends, but this time he had gone on Thursday night. I asked him if he had told Buell
Wesley Frazier why he had gone home a different night and if he had
told him anything about bringing back some curtain rods. He denied it.
During this conversation he told me he reached his home by cab and
changed both his shirt and trouser before going to the show. He said
his cab fare home was 85 cents. When asked what he did with his
clothing he took off when he got home, he said he put them in the
dirty clothes. In talking with him further about his location at the
time the President was killed, he said he ate lunch with some of the
colored boys who worked with him. One of them was called "Junior",
and the other one was a little short man whose name he didn't know.
He said he had a cheese sandwich and some fruit, & that was the only
package he had brought with him to work and denied that he brought
the long package described by Mr. Frazier and his sister.
I asked him why he lived in a room, while his wife lived in Irving.
He said Mrs. Paine, the lady his wife lived with, was learning
Russian, that his wife needed help with the young baby, and that
it made a nice arrangement for both of them. He said he didn't know
Mr. Paine very well, but Mr. Paine and his wife, he thought, were
separated a great deal of the time. He said he owned now car, but that
the Paines have two cars, and told that in the garage at the Paine's
home he had some sea bags that had a lot of his personal belongings,
that he had left them there after coming back from New Orleans in
September. He said the Paines were close friends of his.
He said he had a brother, Robert, who lived in Fort Worth. We later
found that this brother lived in Denton.
I asked him if he belonged to the Communist Party, but he said that
he never had a card, but repeated that he belonged to the Fair Play
for Cuba organization and that he belonged to the American
Civil Liberties Union and paid $5.00 dues. I asked him again why
he carried the pistol to the show. He refused to answer questions
about the pistol. He did tell me, however, that he had bought it
several months before in Fort Worth, Texas.
I noted that in questioning him that he did answer very quickly, and
I asked him if he had ever been questioned before, and he told me
that he had. He was questioned one time for a long time by the FBI
after he had returned from Russia. He said they used different
methods, they tried the hard and soft, and the buddy method and
said he was very familiar with interrogation. He reminded me that
he did not have to answer any questions at all until he talked to his
attorney, and I told him again that he could have an attorney any
time he wished. He said he didn't have money to pay for a phone call
to Mr. Abdt [sic]. I told him to call "collect", if he liked, to use the
jail phone or that he could have another attorney if he wished. He
said he didn't want another attorney, he wanted to talk to this attorn-
ey first. I believe he made this call later as he thanked me later
during one of our interviews for allowing him the use of the tele-
phone. I explained to him that all prisoners were allowed to use
the telephone. I asked him why he wanted Mr. Abt instead of some
available attorney. He told me he didn't know Mr. Abt personally,
but that he was familiar with a case where Mr. Abdt [sic] defend-
ed some people for a violation of the Smith Act, and that if he
didn't get Mr. Abt, that he felt sure the American Civil Liberties
Union would furnish him a lawyer. He explained to me that this
organization helped people who needed attorneys and weren't
able to get them.
While in New Orleans, he lived at 4907 Magazine Street and at
one time worked for the William Riley Company near that address.
When asked about any
previous arrests, he told me that he had had a little trouble and
while working with the Fair Play for Cuba Committee and had a
fight with some anti-Castro people. He also told me of a debate on
some radio station in New Orleans where he debated with some
anti=Castro people.
I asked him what he thought of President Kennedy and his family,
and he said he didn't have any views on the President. He said, "I
like the President's family very well. I have my own views about
national policies." I asked him about a polygraph test. He told me
he had refused a polygraph test with the FBI, and he certaily [sic]
wouldn't take one at this time. Both Mr. Bookhout, of the FBI, and
Mr. Kelley, and the Marshall asked Oswald some questions during
this interview.
Oswald was placed back in jail at 11:33 AM. At 12:35 PM Oswald
was brought to the office for another interview with Inspector
Kelley and some of the other officers and myself. I talked to
Oswald about the different places he had lived in Dallas in an
effort to find where he was living. [ shorthand crossed out]
when the picture. was made of him holding a rifle which looked to
be the same rifle we had recovered. This picture showed to be
taken near a stairway with many identifying things in the back
yard. He told me about one of the places where he had lived.
Mr. Paine had told me about where Oswald had lived on Neely Street.
Oswald was very evasive about this location. We later found that
this was the place where the picture was made. I again asked him
about his personal effects [handwritten: 'stop' with the word 'and'
underlined] and where his things might be kept, and he told me
about the things at Mrs. Paine's residence and a few things on
Beckley. He was placed back in jail at 1:10 PM.
At 6:00 PM I instructed the officers to bring Oswald back into
the office, and in the presence of Jim Bookhout, Homicide Offi-
cers, and Inspector Kelley, of the Secret Service, I showed
Oswald an enlarged picture of him holding a rifle and wearing
a pistol. This picture had been enlarged by our Crime Lab from
a picture found in the garage at Mrs. Paine's home. He said the
picture was not his, that the face was his face, but that this
picture had been made by someone super-imposing his face, the
other part of the picture was not him at all and that he had never
seen the picture before. When I told him that the picture was
recovered from Mrs. Paine's garage, he said that picture had
never been in his possession, and I explained to him that it was
an enlargement of the small picture obtained in the search. At
that time I showed him the smaller picture. He denied ever seeing
that picture and said that he knew all about photography, that he
had done a lot of work in photography himself, that the small pic-
ture was a reduced picture of the large picture, and had been made
by some person unknown to him. He further
stated that since he had been photographed here at the City Hall and
that people had been taking his picture while being transferred from
my office to the jail door that someone had been able to get a picture
of his face and that with that, they had made this picture. He told me
that he understood photography real well, and that in time, he would
be able to show that it was not his picture, and that it had been made
by someone else. At this time he said that he did not want to answer
any more questions, and he was returned to the jail about 7:15 PM.
At 9:30 on the morning of November 24, I asked that Oswald be
brought to the office. At that time I showed him a map of the City
of Dallas which had been recovered in the search of his room on
North Beckley. This map had some markings on it, one of which
was about where the President was shot. He said that the map had
nothing to do with the President's shooting and again, as he had
done in previous interviews, denied knowing anything of the
shooting of the President, or of the shooting of Officer Tippit. He
said the map had been used to locate buildings where he had gone
to talk to people about employment.
During this interview Inspector Kelley asked Oswald about his
religious views, and he replied that he didn't agree with all the
philosophies on religion. He seemed evasive with Inspector Kelley
about how he felt about religion, and I asked him if he believed
in a Diety. He was evasive and didn't answer this question.
Someone of the Federal officers asked Oswald if he thought Cuba
would be better off since the President was assassinated. To this
he replied that he felt that since the President was killed that
someone else would take his place, perhaps Vice President John-
son, and that his views would probably be largely the same as
those of President Kennedy.
I again asked him
about the gun and [ unreadable] the picture of
him holding a similar rifle, and he again denied having any knowl-
edge of the picture or the rifle and denied that he had ever lived
on Neely Street, and when I told him that friends who visited
him there said that he lived there, he said they were mistaken
about visiting him there, because he had never lived there.
[another typed paragraph was added at the top of the page. At
least the first sentence of the paragraph is unreadable. A drawn
arrow indicates the insertion point] ... Marxist, and repeated
this two or three times. He said that the station he had debated on
in New Orleans was Bill Stakey's [sic] program. He denied again
knowing a A. Hidell in New Orleans, and again reiterated his
belief in Fair Play for Cuba and for what the Committee stood for.
After some questioning, Chief Jesse E. Curry came to the office
and asked if I was not ready for this man to be transferred. I
told him we were ready as soon as the security was complete
in the basement where we were to place Oswald in a car to
transfer him to the County Jail. I had objected to the large
cameras obstructing the jail door, and the Chief moved back
across the street and the cameras were well back in the gar-
age. I told the Chief we were ready. He told us to go ahead and
that he and Chief Stevenson, who was with him, would meet
us at the County Jail.
Oswald's shirt which he was wearing at the time of arrest had
been removed, and sent to the Crime Lab in Washington with
all the other evidence for the comparison tests, and he said he
would like to have a shirt from his clothing that had been brought
to the office to wear over the T-shirt that he was wearing at the
time. We selected the best-looking shirt from his things, but
he said he would prefer wearing a black Ivy League type shirt
from his things, indicating it might be a little warmer. We made
this change and I asked him if he wouldn't like to wear a hat to
more or less camouflage his looks in the car while being trans-
ferred as all of the people who had been viewing him had seen
him bareheaded. He didn't want to do this. Then Officer J.R. Leavelle
handcuffed his left hand to Oswald's right hand, then we left the
office for the transfer.
Inasmuch as this report was made from rough notes and memory,
it is entirely possible that one of these questions could be in a
separate interview from the one indicated in this report. He was
interviewed under the most adverse conditions in my office which
is 9 feet 6 inches by 14 feet, and has only one front door, which
forced us to move this prisoner through hundreds of people each
time he was carried from my office to the jail door, some 20 feet,
during each of these transfers. the crowd would attempt to jam
around him, shouting questions and many containing slurs. This
office is also surrounded by large glass windows, and there were
many officers working next to these windows. I have no recorder
in this office and was unable to record the interview. I was inter-
rupted many times during these interviews to step from the office
to talk to another witness or secure additional information from
officers needed for the interrogation."
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