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MR. SPECTER. And Mr. Fernandez was on this theory, aware of that and was aware approximately the time Oswald would make this attempt, and, therefore, indicated to Lechuga that there would be some danger of Oswald being disclosed as an attempted infiltrator?

MR. NUNES. I beg pardon? I don't understand the words.

MR. SPECTER. As I understand part of the hypothesis here, the theory is based on the fact that Fernandez said to Lechuga, "We must be careful, we will be in danger." You recall about August 8. Now does that statement have anything to do with Oswald?

MR. NUNES. Well, what I think is this: He sent that letter to Lechuga, and that is Oswald came to me offering his service to train Cubans, all this offered to me at that time. Something that never was happening in the sense of that there was a secret anti-Castro training camp, and the chairman of their Fair Play for Cuba Committee trying to join the Cuban group here in New Orleans. Those are the facts. I don't want to tell something that I don't know of. I just want to show you that tremendous coincidence of all this happening.

MR. SPECTER. Now it doesn't seem likely, does it, that Oswald would go around distributing literature in the streets like he did if he was actually attempting to infiltrate the anti-Castro movement?

MR. NUNES. Remember that that was after I turned down his offer and told him that I don't have nothing to do with military activities. And after he did that I cannot say if he turned down completely his mind, eliminating the possibility of being able to infiltrate the training camp. He might try to do that after he was turned down.

MR. SPECTER. Do you know of any conceivable association between anybody in the anti-Castro movement and Oswald that could have acted as a source of information to Oswald—conducted or directed to him?

MR. NUNES. No.

MR. SPECTER. Would you have any way of obtaining information of that sort out of your anti-Castro activities and contacts? If there were such a person, do you think you would be likely to know about it?

MR. NUNES. I don't think so.

MR. SPECTER. If there were such a person, that is to say, some agent of the anti-Castro movement working with Oswald, do you not think that you would be likely to have heard of it?

MR. NUNES. No.

MR. SPECTER. You see, that is a hard question, because here in the city you have many persons. There are some pro-Castro, there are some anti-Castro. There are some that are not pro-Castro, but they are not anti-Castro. And there are some that are not anti-Castro, but they are not pro-Castro. And there are some that are not pro-Castro, but they are not anti-Castro. And there are some that are not anti-Castro,