TESTIMONY OF JOHN E. DONOVAN
The testimony of John E. Donovan
was taken at 10:30 a.m., on May 5, 1964, at 200 Maryland Avenue NE.,
Washington, D.C., by Mr. John Hart Ely, member of the staff of the President's
Commission. Richard M. Mosk, also a member of the staff, was present.
Mr. ELY. Would you stand,
please?
Do you solemnly swear that the
testimony you are about to give will be the truth, the whole truth, and nothing
but the truth, so help you God?
Mr. DONOVAN. I do.
Mr. ELY. Please be seated. My
name is John Ely.
The gentleman directly to my
right is Richard Mosk. We are both members of the staff of the President's
Commission on the Assassination of President Kennedy, which was appointed by
President Johnson to investigate all the facts and circumstances surrounding
the death of President Kennedy.
The rules of the Commission
require that I give to you a copy of the Executive Order No. 11130, which is
the President's order creating this Commission, a copy of the Joint Resolution
of Congress, and a copy of the Commission's rules which relate to the questioning
of witnesses.
Is it correct to say that I have
given you a copy of each of these documents?
Mr. DONOVAN. You gave them to
me, and I gave them a cursory reading.
Mr. ELY. Would you state your
full name, please?
Mr. DONOVAN. John E. Donovan.
Mr. ELY. And where do you live?
Mr. DONOVAN. 2009 Belmont Road,
NW., Washington, D.C.
Mr. ELY. What is your
occupation?
Mr. DONOVAN. I teach school at Ascension Academy,
Alexandria, Va.
Mr. ELY. And prior to teaching
at Ascension Academy, what did you do?
Mr. DONOVAN. I attended medical school last year at
Georgetown University.
Mr. ELY. You did not, however,
get a medical degree?
Mr. DONOVAN. That is correct.
Mr. ELY. Previous to attending
medical school, what did you do?
Mr. DONOVAN. I attended the
University of Dayton; Dayton, Ohio.
Mr. ELY. This is after you got
out of the Marine Corps?
Mr. DONOVAN. Yes.
Eight months prior to that, I worked for a bank Boston, Mass. Prior to
that, I was employed by the U.S. Marine Corps.
Mr. ELY. For how long?
Mr. DONOVAN. Three years and 3
months, I think.
Mr. ELY. And what was the rank
at which you were discharged?
Mr. DONOVAN. First lieutenant.
Mr. ELY. You had had higher
education before you entered the Marine Corps?
Mr. DONOVAN. Prior to the Marine
Corps I completed Georgetown University School of Foreign Service in 1956.
Mr. ELY. And you received a
bachelor of arts degree?
Mr. DONOVAN. A bachelor of
science, foreign service.
Mr. ELY. As you undoubtedly
know, Mr. Donovan, we have called you here because we think that you might be
able to tell us something about the background of Lee Harvey Oswald, whom I
believe you knew when you were both
members of the Marine Corps.
Why don't you, in your own
words, outline your contact with Oswald, and I
will interrupt with questions.
Mr. DONOVAN. In the spring of
1959, I returned from a tour in Japan.
I was assigned to Marine Air Control Squadron 9 in Santa Ann, Calif.
Mr. ELY. Excuse me. There is
something in these service records that confuses me. Is the installation at
Santa Ana separate from the one at El Toro?
Mr. DONOVAN. It comes under the
command of El Toro, but it is, I believe,
5 miles removed.
El Toro is a jet type base.
Santa Ana is still known by the title of "LTA", which stands for
lighter than air, which stems from the fact that in World War II it was a blimp
base. It is now a helicopter base and a radar base.
In that spring, I was the
assistant operations officer and the training officer at Marine Air Control
Squadron 9, and it is there that I came into contact with Oswald.
Mr. ELY. What was your rank at
this time?
Mr. DONOVAN. First lieutenant.
Our function at that base was to
surveil for aircraft, but basically to train both enlisted and officers for
later assignment overseas. Some of my
fellow officers there had served with Oswald in Japan, and as all ranks, from
generals to privates probably do, they discussed their contemporaries and how
to get along with them.
I was informed that Oswald was
very competent, but a little bit nuts on foreign affairs.
Mr. ELY. Who told you this?
Mr. DONOVAN. Bill Trail--William
Kenneth Trail is his name had served with him in Japan, and was around when
Oswald underwent some court-martial proceedings, but I don't recall what they
were. I don't know if my memory has been refreshed by the newspaper or if I
actually knew then. I don't believe I recall.
At any rate, Oswald served on my crew there, served on a lot of crews,
but basically mine.
Mr. ELY. Let me interrupt a
moment to define a little more closely the relationship between you and Oswald.
Would it be a fair
characterization to say that you were his commanding officer?
Mr. DONOVAN. No; that is not
correct. The commanding officer was a lieutenant colonel. Oswald served on a
crew, a radar crew, and on that crew I was the officer in command.
Mr. ELY. I understand. How many men were on the crew?
Mr. DONOVAN. I believe that there were always about three
officers and about seven enlisted men. It varied from time to time. We were supposed to have 12 enlisted men,
but we were seldom up to strength.
Mr. ELY. So Oswald would have
been one of the six or seven enlisted men with whom you were in closest
contact?
Mr. DONOVAN. Correct. I served
with him on a 4-hour watch once a day, usually five days a week--sometimes that
was the morning watch, sometimes the afternoon, and sometimes it was a rather
extensive night watch.
During night watch, you had to
stay up until all aircraft were in.
Often
this was quite
boring. And this is when I had the most occasion to talk to him.
Mr. ELY. It amazed me how much
you remembered about Oswald in view of the fact that you were an officer and he
was an enlisted man.
Do you think your memory of him
is atypical, or would you remember all the enlisted men in that crew
approximately the same?
Mr. DONOVAN. I would remember, I
believe, all of them equally well. Most of them I had served with in Japan.
Mr. ELY. You had not known
Oswald in Japan?
Mr. DONOVAN. If I knew him in
Japan, I don't remember. They played football on a team that I coached
overseas, which to a degree gives you a common bond.
Number two, these are not
typical marine enlisted. They have a much higher than average IQ. And they
speak well on a given subject they are interested in--usually women and sports.
But it was quite normal in working with them to talk with them about all
subjects.
You were constantly in
communication with the center concerning aircraft, if something was going on
you talked to them on the intercommunication system. And it was quite ordinary to talk to them, standing at the back
of the radar room in off hours.
I think I can remember all the
men on that crew pretty well.
Mr. ELY. All right.
I derailed you there for a moment.
You had mentioned what Lieutenant Trail had told you. And I don't think there is any point in
going into that any further.
Well, let me chase down one
thing you mentioned. You said that you
thought the enlisted men on this crew were above average in terms of ability
for Marine Corps enlisted men. Would
you say that Oswald specifically was more intelligent than the average enlisted
man, or would you just infer this from the fact that he was chosen for this
job?
Mr. DONOVAN. Both. I think he
had a given IQ or GCT, General Classification Test score, that would place him
in a position of being there. I also
found him competent in any job I saw him try in the center. Sometimes he surveiled for unidentified
aircraft. Sometimes he surveiled for
aircraft in distress. Sometimes he made
plots on the board. Sometimes he
relayed information to other radar sites in the Air Force or Navy. And
sometimes he swept the floor when we were cleaning up getting ready to go
home. I found him competent in all
functions.
Sometimes he was a little
moody. But I never heard him wise off
to a sergeant or any officer. And in
working with most people, as long as they do their job, if they are moody, that
is their business.
He was always neat. He was neat. Sometimes his lack of enthusiasm got people in dutch, which the
other members of the crew did not always appreciate.
Mr. ELY. When you say he was neat, was your only
contact with him in regard to this crew?
In other words, it was not your job to inspect his quarters or his rifle
or his uniform?
Mr. DONOVAN. His quarters were
not exceptionally neat, and I did have occasion to inspect them.
But he always cleaned up
sufficiently so that he passed inspection.
I don't think he was that way by nature. But I think he had figured out that the Marine Corps demanded this
of him. And he at least complied in
that respect.
Mr. ELY. Do you remember an occasion on which he was
transferred out of a quonset hut because of a refusal to clean up?
Mr. DONOVAN. I recall that there
was some difficulty. Two or three inspections had gone badly. And that the other members of his quonset
hut said he was at fault. It is
difficult for a sergeant ever to say who is at fault. But after the complaints came in long enough, I believe he was
transferred to another hut.
Mr. ELY. But your general
impression is that he was not especially----
Mr. DONOVAN. Sloppy--no; he was
not sloppy.
Mr. ELY. I wonder, Mr. Donovan, if you could return
to your description of the way Oswald performed his job, perhaps with
particular reference to how he reacted to stress situations.
Mr. DONOVAN. Yes.
I have been on watch with him when an emergency
arose, and in
turning around and reporting it to the crew chief and to myself---and to me,
simultaneously, he would tell you what the status of the emergency was, if
anyone could tell, and what he thought the obvious action we should take. And
he was right. There was usually an obvious solution. Then he waited fox you to
tell him what to do, and he did it, no matter what you told him.
Mr. ELY. Did he remain calm at
all times; or was he excitable with regard to his job?
Mr. DONOVAN. I don't recall him
being particularly excitable.
Mr. ELY. Would you characterize
him as "very cool," or do you think that might be overstating the
case in the other direction?
Mr. DONOVAN. I just think in
that respect he was normal.
Mr. ELY. Did you have occasion
to observe the relation between Oswald and his fellow enlisted men?
Mr. DONOVAN. At times; yes.
Mr. ELY. Did it seem that he was
normal to you with regard to mixing with his peers?
Mr. DONOVAN. No; he did not
share a common interest with them. For better or for worse, the average young
American male in that age is interested in saving enough money to go buy
another beer and get another date. This I don't believe would characterize him
at all. He read a great deal.
Mr. ELY. Excuse me. Do you remember anything that he read
specifically?
Mr. DONOVAN. No; I know that the
men always told me that he subscribed to a Russian newspaper.
Mr. ELY. When you say Russian
newspaper, do you recall whether that was one printed in the Russian language?
Mr. DONOVAN. No; I do not.
Mr. ELY. You never saw that
newspaper?
Mr. DONOVAN. I never saw the
newspaper.
Mr. ELY. Did you ever question
Oswald about his reading of it?
Mr. DONOVAN. Yes; I did. And he did not apparently take this stuff as
gospel--although----
Mr. ELY. When you say that, are
you implying that it not only was a Russian newspaper, but it was also a
Communist newspaper?
Mr. DONOVAN. Yes; I implied that.
And I felt that he thought this presented a very different and perhaps equally
just side of the international affairs in comparison with the United States
newspapers.
Mr. ELY. Was 'the paper printed
in Russia, do you know?
Mr. DONOVAN. I do not know.
Mr. ELY. And, of course, you
don't know the name of the paper?
Mr. DONOVAN. That is correct.
Mr. ELY. Did he tell you at that
time why he subscribed to the paper?
Mr. DONOVAN. Yes; he said he was
interested in learning Russian. And he
took great pride in the fact that he could speak it. He couldn't prove it by me, because I don't speak Russian. But he
said he could, and his contemporaries believed he could. As far as I know, he
could.
Mr. ELY. But you also got the
idea that he enjoyed this paper for its ideological content?
Mr. DONOVAN. To a degree. I think he enjoyed international affairs in all respects. He
enjoyed studying them. He thought there were many great---there were many grave
injustices concerning the affairs in the international situation.
I know that he constantly
brought up the idea that our Government must be run by many incompetent
people. And, as I stated, and you have
probably read in your reports or the newspapers, that he was very well versed,
at least on the superficial facts of a given foreign situation.
His bend with me was that I was
a recent graduate of the Foreign Service School, at least fairly well
acquainted with situations throughout the world. And he would take great pride
in his ability to mention not only the leader of a country, but five or six
subordinates in that country who held positions of prominence. He took great pride in talking to a passing
officer coming in or out of the radar center, and in a most interested manner,
ask him what he thought of a given situation, listen to that officer's
explanation, and say, "Thank you very much."
As soon as we were alone again,
he would say, "Do you agree with that?"
In many cases it was obvious
that the officer had no more idea about that than he did about the polo races---or
polo matches in Australia.
And Oswald would then say,
"Now, if men like that are leading us, there is something wrong--when I
obviously have more intelligence and more knowledge than that man."
And I think his grave
misunderstanding that I tried to help him with is that these men were Marine
officers and supposed to be schooled in the field of warfare as the Marine
Corps knows it, and not as international political analysts. And in some
respects he Was probably better informed than most people in the Marine Corps,
namely, on international affairs.
Mr. ELY. Do you remember any
specific international events or situations which he questioned officers about?
Mr. DONOVAN. No; not
particularly.
I know that Cuba interested him
more than most other situations. He was
fairly well informed about Mr. Batista. He referred to atrocities in general,
not in particular. I think that we all know that there were injustices
committed under the Batista administration.
And he was against that. And he was against this sort of dictatorship.
But I never heard him in any
way, shape or form confess that he was a Communist, or that he ever thought
about being a Communist.
Mr. ELY. Did you hear him express sympathy for Castro
specifically?
Mr. DONOVAN. Yes--but, on the
other hand, so did Time Magazine at that time. Harvard accepted him de facto,
at face value which is one of our better schools, I suppose. At any rate, what
he said about Castro was not an unpopular belief at that time.
Mr. ELY. What did he say?
Mr. DONOVAN. I don't recall any
particulars, except that it was a godsend that somebody had overthrown Batista.
Mr. ELY. Did he ever express to
you any desire that he personally would take part in clearing up injustices,
either in Cuba or anywhere else?
Mr. DONOVAN. He not only never
said it to me, I never heard of him saying it to anyone else.
Mr. ELY. Based on your
observation of men throughout your military career, would you say that Oswald
constituted a typical case of someone whose interests were different from the
rest of the enlisted men? Do you think
that his loneliness, his desire to be alone, exceeded that or would you say it
was a more or less normal thing for somebody interested in other things?
Mr. DONOVAN. Most young men in
the Marine Corps, I suppose in all services, have the common bond that they
want to get out. He certainly shared that common bond with them. I think that
was his only common bend. I don't believe he shared an equal interest in
sports. I don't think he shared an
equal intense interest in girls. And although I believe he drank, sometimes to
excess, I don't believe that he shared even that companionship with them
consistently.
Mr. ELY. You mentioned that the
sort of unit with which you were associated was one that drew enlisted men of a
higher intellectual caliber. For this
reason, were there men in the unit who shared Oswald's interests, or even given
this he was still the only one interested in serious reading?
Mr. DONOVAN. Not that I know of. But as I have told both the FBI and the
Secret Service, he had living in his barracks a boy whose name I am sorry I
cannot remember, whose nickname was Beezer.
Mr. ELY. Would the man's name be
Roussel?
Mr. DONOVAN. That is it. He was from Louisiana, I believe. And this boy fixed me up with his sister who
was an airline stewardess. I took her
out on one occasion, I believe that this boy was at least interested enough in
Oswald that he fixed Oswald up with her once.
And she related to me that he could speak Russian, which I had heard
before. And she referred to him as kind
of an oddball. You probably have her
name and can talk to her.
Mr. ELY. Was her name Rosaleen
Quinn?
Would that ring a bell? You
don't remember?
Mr. DONOVAN. No, I am sorry, it doesn't ring a bell.
Mr. ELY. But you feel that if we could locate this
woman, she could tell us something that would be of interest in reconstructing
his personality?
Mr. DONOVAN. She went out with him once maybe twice. Maybe more than that, I don't know
about. I don't know if she could or
not.
Mr. ELY. Do you remember any
fields other than foreign affairs which Oswald did extensive reading in?
Mr. DONOVAN. No, I do not.
Mr. ELY. Have you ever stated
that Oswald prided himself on knowing the names of the great philosophers, or
would this statement, if attributed to you, have been a mistake?
Mr. DONOVAN. No, that is a
correct statement. He knew the names of
some philosophers.
Mr. ELY. Is it your feeling that
he read philosophy?
Mr. DONOVAN. Manuscripts are
available to all of us which mention these gentlemen's names in support of some
idea. Quite often, if you read the philosopher you see that it is taken out of
context.
I only had 2 years of philosophy
and 2 years of theology at Georgetown.
But even with that limited amount, it was obvious that he often knew the
name, and that was it.
Mr. ELY. Do you remember any of
the philosophers that he did mention?
Mr. DONOVAN. Hegel, which would
be appropriate concerning his later action.
Mr. ELY. Hegel.
Did he mention Marx?
Mr. DONOVAN. No, I don't recall
him--oh, he must have mentioned Marx, but I don't ever recall him using Marxist
philosophy to support anything in particular.
Mr. ELY. Is it your general
impression that the philosophers who interested him were ones that were somehow
tied in with political philosophy?
Mr. DONOVAN. Social revolutions.
Mr. ELY. Do you know whether
Oswald had any knowledge of languages other than Russian and English?
Mr. DONOVAN. No, I do not. I
recall that we had occasion to speak Spanish on the radio, because ham
operators from Mexico were forever cutting in.
He may have known a few words.
But he did not--I don't believe he had a command of Spanish.
Mr. ELY. You have no
recollection of his speaking or understanding German at all?
Mr. DONOVAN. I have no
recollection.
Mr. ELY. Did he ever speak to
you about his plans for after he got out of the Marine Corps?
Mr. DONOVAN. No, I cannot say
that he did.
Mr. ELY. Did he ever express to
you an interest in attending school anywhere?
Mr. DONOVAN. Yes, now that you
mention it; I think he did mention that he intended to pursue school. And, in fact, it was standard for all
officers to encourage any enlisted man to attend school. He certainly had the ability, if he had
wanted to do it.
There was another boy named
Sergeant Park, from Washington, who, I believe, lived in his same quonset hut,
who definitely intended to attend school. I have given this gentleman's name to
both the FBI and the Secret Service.
Mr. ELY. Did Oswald ever mention
to you that he would like to attend school in any foreign country?
Mr. DONOVAN. Never. It came as a
complete surprise to me that he had turned up in Moscow.
Mr. ELY. In fact, he never
mentioned thoughts of traveling at all anywhere outside the country.
Mr. DONOVAN. He never mentioned
it to me.
Mr. ELY. Did you ever hear of
his mentioning it to anybody else?
Mr. DONOVAN. I never heard of it
being mentioned to anyone. Evidently
that was a rather well kept secret, that he intended to depart so suddenly.
Mr. ELY. You mentioned that
Oswald spoke of injustices which took place
during the
Batista regime. Do you remember his
referring to any other country specifically with regard to injustices?
Mr. DONOVAN. No, I don't, except
for Asia in general. I think in talking with the FBI and the Secret Service I
mentioned Guatemala or something, and I tried to tell them that was only all
example, that I never heard him specifically refer to Guatemala, or Venezuela,
or wherever I was talking with them about.
But he had served in the Orient,
and he had seen poverty in the extreme, as anyone who goes to the Orient does,
and he had mentioned that that was unjust.
Mr. ELY. Did you notice any
specific interest in Latin America?
Mr. DONOVAN. Yes. I would say
that he was particularly interested in Latin America. He, for instance, was
relatively familar with the Betancourt family, which is a prominent North,
South American and Central American family, and their regime as a family.
Mr. ELY. Did he ever mention the
Dominican Republic by name?
Mr. DONOVAN. If he did, I don't
recall it.
Mr. ELY. Did he ever have any
specific suggestions as to what should be done about problems in Asia or Latin
America?
Mr. DONOVAN. No. His only
solution that I could see was that authority, particularly the Marine Corps,
ought to be able to recognize talent such as his own, without a given magic
college degree, and put them in positions of prominence. His talent was obviously
unrecognized by the Marine Corps for commission or staff NCO ability, if it existed.
Mr. ELY. This is his opinion?
Mr. DONOVAN. This is his
opinion.
Mr. ELY. You mentioned that
Oswald did not, in your view, have an inordinate interest in competitive
sports.
Do you remember any excursions
into the field of competitive sports?
Mr. DONOVAN. Yes; he went out
for the squadron football team, and I believe he played end. As I stated
before, he often tried to make calls in the huddle for better or for worse,
again, I should say, a quarterback is in charge of the team and should make the
calls. A quarterback did. And I don't
know if he quit or I kicked him off. But, at any rate, he stopped playing.
Mr. ELY. Let me make a comment with regard to
something you said.
Undoubtedly there are many
things you covered with the FBI and the Secret Service. We now have to bring
them out under oath, so we can introduce them into the record of the
Commission. So we know we are being repetitive. We will just ask you to bear with us on this.
Were you the captain of this
team?
Mr. DONOVAN. No; I was the coach
of the team. The captain was a gentleman named Tibbet Czik, and Captain Czik is
still on active duty in the Marine Corps. Last summer he was stationed at New
River, N.C. And Captain Czik would not remember this fellow very well, because
at that time he was recently reinstated in the Marine Corps after having been
out for a few years. He knew at that time very little about radar and was in a
more or less student status. I don't
believe he would remember him.
Mr. ELY. Was Czik the
quarterback?
Mr. DONOVAN. Czik was the
quarterback. Czik was the quarterback all through college of some college in
New Jersey, and had a lot of talent.
Mr. ELY. Was Oswald a proficient
football player?
Mr. DONOVAN. No; he had his
share of ability. But he was too light.
I think the boy only weighed about 125, 130 pounds, as I remember. He had a
slender build.
Mr. ELY. Would you say, however,
that he was normal in terms of speed and agility?
Mr. DONOVAN. Oh, yes; he was
fast enough.
Mr. ELY. So would you
characterize him as athletic, but too light to be a really good football
player?
Mr. DONOVAN. I don't think that
he would ever make first string high school in a good high school.
Mr. ELY. On any kind of team, or
are you just speaking about football?
Mr. DONOVAN. Football. I never
saw him play basketball that I recall, although
he might have
been talented in that field. He was
coordinated to normal degree.
Mr. ELY. Did you notice any special lack of team
spirit on his part?
Mr. DONOVAN. Yes; like the other
experiences I had with him, he thought he should be boss, and when he was not
immediately accepted as such, there was discontent on his part, which, of
course, is lack of team spirit.
Mr. ELY. You mentioned earlier
that you at times inspected Oswald's quarters. Did you have occasion to inspect
his rifle?
Mr. DONOVAN. Yes; I did. And I
don't recall anything out of order.
Mr. ELY. Are you saying that you
don't recall the results of this inspection, or that you do recall the results
of the inspection and that you don't remember that his rifle was
extraordinarily sloppy?
Mr. DONOVAN. I don't recall that
his rifle was extraordinarily sloppy. I do recall, after having talked with you
about it, the barracks incident, in which there was some discontent on the part
of his contemporaries that the hut was being punished for his lack of order.
Mr. ELY. But your impression is
that he kept his rifle as neat as anybody else?
Mr. DONOVAN. I don't recall to
the contrary.
Mr. ELY. Would you have any
reason to have an impression as to Oswald's proficiency in firing the rifle?
Mr. DONOVAN. No; I would not. I
saw his record book, and I believe at that time he was qualified as a
sharpshooter--or maybe a marksman. If he had not been qualified as a marksman,
which is the minimum standard, I am sure I would have been aware of it, because
I was training officer, and that is one of the things that you must try to
train men in.
Mr. ELY. But you never had
occasion to be with him when he fired a rifle?
Mr. DONOVAN. That is correct.
Mr. ELY. The marksmanship scores
which are recorded in the Marine Corps--are they reliable, or is there an
opportunity to falsify a score?
Mr. DONOVAN. I would say that in
a vast majority of the cases they are reliable. Some people have what is called
an M-1 pencil--namely, you can punch holes in the target the size of an M-1
shell to improve the score. This is a court-martial offense. I am sure it does
happen.
I don't personally know of it
ever having happened, but it might. If he had a score of 210, which would make
him sharpshooter, I would assume that from the standing position he could hit a
10-inch bullseye 8 times out of 10.
Mr. ELY. Do you know how the
score was recorded? Did the firer of the weapon ever go down personally to
inspect the target?
Mr. DONOVAN. Never. That is one
of the things that makes this quite difficult. The men are on a firing range, a
minimum of 200 yards distance, a maximum of 500 yards distance. When you are
put into what is called the butts, or the target area, you do not know whose
target you are pulling, because they switch you around every day. A staff NCO
or an officer comes around and verities each given shot. And it is not
impossible to cheat, but it would be most difficult to. And I have no reason to
suspect that he did.
Mr. ELY. In order that a friend
could cheat for you, he would have to know ahead of time which point you were
firing on, get to that point, and punch the target before the NCO got there?
Mr. DONOVAN. That is correct,
You fired from a given position every day. For instance, if you fired on target
17 during the week or two of qualification, you always fired on target 17.
However, in the target area, where you pulled the targets up and down to repair
them, you were switched from spot to spot every day, and it was not a matter of
choice. The sergeant just said, "You men take target 1", "target
2," and so on. So it would be most unusual. But I suppose it does happen.
Mr. ELY. Earlier in your
deposition you stated, I believe, that you never heard Oswald wise off to any
NCO. When speaking to the FBI, did you characterize him as a wise guy, or is
that the agent's characterization?
Mr. DONOVAN. He was a wise guy
in the sense that he could be disrespectful in a way that you would accept. He
would in a very respectful manner argue with someone and in most cases it was
obvious to people listening that he knew
more than the
person he was arguing with. We had one
fellow on our crew, a S. Sgt. Cornelius Brown, and Sergeant Brown is the most
competent sergeant in the field of radar that I have ever encountered. Sergeant
Brown could barely write. He could read, but again barely read. He could read a
newspaper.
But most people like to think
they are well informed on all subjects. And it was characteristic of Oswald to
bait people, particularly on foreign affairs. He would listen interestedly, ask
questions in an interested manner, and then if the person were not too high in
rank, could point out a dozen places they didn't know what they were talking
about.
Mr. ELY, Do you feel that he
ever asked questions about foreign affairs because he truly wanted to know the
person's opinion?
Mr. DONOVAN. No; I think his
mind was made up. I think he wanted to ask questions to later expose to his
comrades that he knew far more than a person in a position of authority. I
think he tried to make. it evident to his contemporaries that in many cases he
was more gifted and more intelligent than people who were in charge of him. And
this in itself was ridiculous---according to his way of thinking. I don't think
that he ever asked information of anyone on foreign affairs, including me,
whose opinion he particularly respected.
He had his mind made up and was willing to discuss that point of view
with anyone.
Mr. ELY. How did Oswald's fellow
enlisted men react to his baiting of NCOs and officers?
Mr. DONOVAN. Well, sometimes, if
he tried to humiliate the sergeant in the presence of others, the sergeant has
many ways of getting even, and he can make a cleanup detail much more detailed,
he can make barracks inspections much more frequently, and I don't think this
particularly made his fellow marines enthusiastic about his attitude.
Mr. ELY. Do you think his fellow
marines accepted his view that he was brighter than the officers he was talking
to?
Mr. DONOVAN. Yes; I think that
they accepted the view that he was brighter than most people, and was
particularly capable in the field of world affairs. In respect to them, I think he knew more than they did, at least
in facts.
I think they admired his ability
to pursue Russian on his own and learn it.
And I think anyone must admit that this reflects a degree of
intelligence.
Mr. ELY. While you and Oswald
were in the same unit, was he ever in any trouble of a nature which would
require administrative action?
Mr. DONOVAN. Not that I recall.
Mr. ELY. Returning to this date
that you had with this airline stewardess, did she tell you anything about
Oswald?
Mr. DONOVAN. As I recall, the
only thing she said was that he was rather strange. And I do recall that either
she or her brother at that time mentioned that he does speak Russian and reads
Russian newspapers.
Mr. ELY. Did she say in what way
he was strange?
Mr. DONOVAN. I don't recall in
what way she said he was strange.
Mr. ELY. Did you get the feeling
that she hadn't enjoyed herself when she was with him?
Mr. DONOVAN. I got that
impression. But I think that they didn't share any common interest. I think he
was truly interested in international affairs, and that is not typical of her
or other stewardesses I have known.
Mr. ELY. Do you recall the
circumstances under which Oswald left the Marine Corps?
Mr. DONOVAN. Yes; I do.
Mr. ELY. Could you relate them
to us, please?
Mr. DONOVAN. I recall that he
got a hardship discharge. We offered to get him a flight---that is a hop from
El Toro to some place in Texas, his home.
He refused. We considered that normal in that if you take a hop you
sacrifice your transportation pay. We
offered to take him to a bus or train station.
He refused. But that is not
particularly unusual, either.
I recall that he was gone for
some period of time, and shortly before I got out of the Marine Corps, which
was mid-December 1959, we received word that he had showed up in Moscow. This necessitated a lot of change of
aircraft call signs, codes, radio frequencies, radar frequencies.
He had the access to the
location of all bases in the west coast area, all
radio
frequencies for all squadrons, all tactical call signs, and the relative
strength of all squadrons, number and type of aircraft in a squadron, who was
the commanding officer, the authentication code of entering and exiting the
ADIZ, which stands for Air Defense Identification Zone. He knew the range of our radar. He knew the range of our radio. And he knew the range of the surrounding
units' radio and radar.
If you had asked me a month
after I left that area, I could not have told you any but our own. Had I wanted to record them, I certainly
could have secretly, and taken them with me.
Unless he intentionally with malice aforethought wrote them down, I
doubt if he wonts have been able to recall them a month later, either.
Mr. ELY. You recall that various codes were
changed. Now, at what level were these
changed? Was this an action of your
specific unit, or a fairly widespread action?
Mr. DONOVAN. Well, I did not
witness the changing in any other squadrons, but it would have to be, because
the code is obviously between two or more units. Therefore, the other units had
to change it. These codes are a grid, and two lines correspond.
And he gives the grid that you
want, and he reads back "AB," or
whatever the reply is supposed to be, the authentication is supposed to
be.
Mr. ELY. Are authentication
codes changed from time to time as a matter of course?
Mr. DONOVAN. They are changed
from time to time, that is right.
Mr. ELY. Are they changed even
if there is no specific incident which elicits the change?
Mr. DONOVAN. They are
methodically changed anyway. There are some things which he knew on which he
received instruction that there is no way of changing, such as the MPS 16
height-finder radar gear. That had recently been integrated into the Marine
Corps system. It had a height-finding
range far in excess of our previous equipment, and it has certain
limitations. He had been schooled on
those limitations.
It cannot operate above a given
altitude in setting--in other words, you cannot place the thing above a given
terrain height.
He had also been schooled on a piece of
machinery called a TPX-1, which is used to transfer radio---radar and radio
signals over a great distance. Radar is very susceptible to homing missiles,
and this piece of equipment is used to put your radar antenna several miles
away, and relay the information back to your site which you hope is relatively
safe. He had been schooled on this. And that kind of stuff you cannot change.
Mr. ELY. Did Oswald have any
kind of clearance?
Mr. DONOVAN. He must have had
secret clearance to work in the radar center, because that was a minimum
requirement for all of us.
Mr. ELY. Was the spot at which
he worked such that in order to gain admittance one would have to show some
sort of credentials?
Mr. DONOVAN. Yes; they checked
your card data. Within the center, which is called a counter-air operations
center, he rotated through all positions of an enlisted man. At times, as I
told you, he served as plotter, sometimes surveillance, sometimes expert as
crew chief.
Mr. ELY Were you the one who
picked the crew chief?
Mr. DONOVAN. I was in a rather
favorable position, since I was the training officer and assistant operations
officer, that I had first choice of crew chiefs. I always picked one of two men
either Sgt. Cornelius Brown or Sgt. Eugene Holmburg. I have already told you
where Sergeant Brown is.
Sergeant Holmburg is now a
commissioned warrant officer and still on active duty in the Marine Corps.
Mr. ELY. Did you ever pick
Oswald to act as crew chief?
Mr. DONOVAN. There was occasion
when Oswald acted as crew chief. If one
of these sergeants had another duty somewhere else, and Oswald was senior man
present, he was crew chief. And I had no complaint about his work.
Mr. ELY. Did he show any special
ability in this direction?
Mr. DONOVAN. Yes; I think he was
competent, very competent. And I think
he did his job
well. I don't recall anything coming up that he could not handle.
Mr. ELY. In acting as crew
chief, do you think he demonstrated leadership qualities?
Mr. DONOVAN. I don't think he
was a leader.
Mr. ELY. However, is it fair to
say that any reservations you have about his ability as a leader were not
sufficient to make you decide never to use him as a crew chief again?
Mr. DONOVAN. I would not
hesitate to use him as a crew chief.
Mr. ELY. When the other men in
the unit found out that Oswald was in the process of getting a hardship
discharge, did they make any offers to help, other than the ones you have
mentioned concerning transportation?
Mr. DONOVAN. I recall that I
offered to help him any way I could, including financially. And you can talk to
Sergeant Brown, but I believe that Sergeant Brown helped him, or offered to
help him.
Mr. ELY. Did he accept these
offers?
Mr. DONOVAN. He did not from me,
and to the best of my knowledge he did not from anyone.
Mr. ELY. Did he give a reason
for refusing them?
Mr. DONOVAN. He didn't need the
help.
Mr. ELY. Did you find out about
his attempt to get a hardship discharge through observation of his papers, or
did he mention it to you?
Mr. DONOVAN. I have no idea. I
don't recall seeing any papers. Just
word around the squadron.
Mr. ELY. Would you have any idea
of how long in advance of his actual discharge you or others heard about the
fact that he was trying to get a discharge?
Mr. DONOVAN. I do not recall.
Mr. ELY. Did he ever discuss
with you the reasons for the discharge?
Mr. DONOVAN. I don't recall if
he ever discussed them or not. I did
know that his mother needed help. And, at that time, I recall that I believed
he was a sole surviving son. Since that date I have read that he has a brother. At that time, as I recall, I believed him to
be an only son, and his mother needed help.
Mr. ELY. Did you observe on the
part of Oswald anything that could be termed mental instability?
Mr. DONOVAN. No; except that he
had an extreme passion for this field of foreign affairs---or at least in his
discussions with me and they might have been limited to me, I don't know. But
it is unusual when anyone is solely interested in one given thing.
Mr. ELY. During discussions of
foreign affairs, did he get visibly angry, did he raise his voice?
Mr. DONOVAN. No; he never raised
his voice, but he could become passionate in the defense of a point, and become
quite enthusiastic in trying to get you to see what he saw.
Mr. ELY. But he always retained
physical control of himself, in terms of pounding the table, screaming?
Mr. DONOVAN. Oh, yes; I don't
believe he became any more physically worked up than people we talk with every
day.
Mr. ELY. Did you observe Oswald
to complain about the Marine Corps any more than the average Marine complains
about the Marine Corps?
Mr. DONOVAN. No; he stuck in my
mind in that respect only because he was particularly opposed to the
recognition promotion program. Most
guys complain about having to stand so many inspections, having to clean up the
barracks so many times, having to go on KP so many times, et cetera.
I don't recall those complaints
from him. They may have come. The complaint he had was that the Marine Corps
did not recognize his ability to to be in a position of command. I recall that
on several instances I encouraged him to pursue this, and put in for NCO
leadership school, if he felt he had the qualities, or to go out, get a
commission, and come back in, and try to do his best in that way.
Mr. ELY. Do you know whether he
ever took an OCS qualification exam?
Mr. DONOVAN. I do not recall
that he did.
Mr. ELY. Do you recall any
interest on Oswald's part in music?
Mr. DONOVAN. No; I do not.
Mr. ELY. Fine.
I am going to run down a list of short questions like that and the
answer to many of them may be simply that you don't remember. These are things that have been suggested to
us.
Do you recall whether or not he
played chess?
Mr. DONOVAN. Yes; I do recall. I
have played chess with him some nights. And, as a matter of fact, he was a
pretty good chess player. I won the base championship that year in chess. I know that on occasion he beat me. That was not a very big base. But he and I were comparable players. I think I beat him more times than I lost to
him.
Mr. ELY. Did he ever have
occasion to discuss with you his religious beliefs?
Mr. DONOVAN. I don't recall that
he ever expressed any belief in God.
Mr. ELY. Do you recall that
he----
Mr. DONOVAN. I don't recall that
he ever expressed any denial of God.
Mr. ELY. Never mentioned the
subject at all?
Mr. DONOVAN. If he did, I don't
recall it.
Mr. ELY. Do you recall his
getting into any fights while he and you were at Santa Ana?
Mr. DONOVAN. I do not recall his
getting into any fights.
Mr. ELY. I believe you mentioned
earlier that he did not seem to you particularly interested in girls.
Was this just because he was
interested in other things, or do you have any reason to believe that there was
anything abnormal about his desires?
Mr. DONOVAN. I have no reason to
suspect that he was homosexual, and in that squadron at that time one fellow
was discharged from the service for being homosexual. He was in no way tied in with it that I know of. His lack of interest in girls may be only my
belief, because as an officer I cannot have occasion to know him socially, but
in our conversations he never was particularly Interested in talking about
them.
Mr. ELY. Do you know whether he smoked?
Mr. DONOVAN. I don't recall.
Mr. ELY. Would you say that he
had a good sense of humor?
Mr. DONOVAN. If my sense of
humor is good, he did not.
Mr. ELY. Did he attempt to be funny?
Mr. DONOVAN. He attempted it at times.
Mr. ELY. And, in your opinion,
failed?
Mr. DONOVAN. And in my opinion he was a failure in that
respect.
Mr. ELY. You have mentioned that
he read a Russian newspaper. Do you
remember any other possessions or habits or affectations which would suggest an
interest in the Soviet Union?
Mr. DONOVAN. No, I do not.
However, I do recall that in
college we had some monumentally boring textbooks to read concerning GATT, et
cetera--at least at the time they were monumentally boring. And on occasion he
would bring up one of these books--I don't recall which one but say, "Are
you familiar with this?" And it
was my good fortune to have studied it. And he would ask about something. And in some respects he would ask you about
a term he did not know. But he never
would ask you about a concept, except in an effort to get you to discuss it or
argue it. But he would ask you what
some word meant in economics. He was interested in international economics.
Mr. ELY. Could you state for the
record what GATT stands for?
Mr. DONOVAN. General Agreement
on Trade and Tariff.
Mr. ELY. Do you recall his
having any nicknames?
Mr. DONOVAN. Yes.
Mr. ELY. What were they?
Mr. DONOVAN. Ozzie.
Mr. ELY. Anything else?
Mr. DONOVAN. Not that I recall.
Mr. ELY. Did most people call
him Ozzie?
Mr. DONOVAN. Or Oz.
Mr. ELY. Did you ever know or
hear of his being in contact with the Cuban consulate, either in person or by
mail?
Mr. DONOVAN. I never heard of
that.
Mr. ELY. Do you remember
whether----
Mr. DONOVAN. Are you talking
about then, or now?
Mr. ELY. I am talking about
then, right.
Do you recall whether he made
any trips, when he had time off?
Mr. DONOVAN. Yes; I think he
took a couple of trips down to Tijuana, but I don't think those were for
reasons of studying international economies, although they might well have
been.
Mr. ELY. Did he ever tell you
what he did in Tijuana?
Mr. DONOVAN. Never, and I never
inquired.
Mr. ELY. Do you know whether he
took any trips to Los Angeles?
Mr. DONOVAN. I don't know it,
but I am sure he did, because it was common for all those boys to go in and out
of Los Angeles or Hollywood, or up to Disneyland--whether they wanted to go up
for a beer or a date or something.
Mr. ELY. Did you notice that he
either took more trips than the average marine, or that he took fewer trips?
Mr. DONOVAN. I did not recognize
his itinerary as being anything out of the ordinary in that respect.
Mr. ELY. Do you remember his
receiving any visitors while he was at Santa Ana?
Mr. DONOVAN. I do not recall his
receiving any visitors.
Mr. ELY. Does the name
Lieutenant Cupenak mean anything to you?
Mr. DONOVAN. Means absolutely
nothing to me.
Mr. ELY. Cupenak does not even
sound like any name that means anything to you?
Mr. DONOVAN. Yes, I knew a
Lieutenant John Cuaka. C-u-a-k-a. That spelling is strictly phonetic.
Mr. ELY. Was he at Santa Ana at
that time?
Mr. DONOVAN. I do not believe he
was. I knew him in the Philippines and in Japan. He was a radar maintenance
officer that generally served with a GCA, standing for Ground Control Approach
unit. But Cupenak doesn't ring a bell at all.
Mr. ELY. Finally, Mr. Donovan, I
would like to get your opinion on which of the men who were at. Santa Ana at
the time that both you and Oswald were there would be most helpful to us in
reconstructing the personality of Oswald. I will mention the names that I have
to you, and see whether you think----
Mr. DONOVAN. You mean which in
the plural or singular? You want me to say which would be most----
Mr. ELY. I will read the names
to you, and you can comment on them individually.
Do you remember a man named
Thornley?
Mr. DONOVAN. I don't recall the
name at all.
Mr. ELY. All right.
How about a man named Lewis?
Mr. DONOVAN. Don't recall the
name at all.
Mr. ELY. Botelho?
Mr. DONOVAN. Yes, Botelho was a
man in our squadron. I cannot recall his face. But I do recall the man being in
our squadron. And he went by the nickname, normally enough, of Bo.
Mr. ELY. Do you remember whether
or not he knew Oswald well?
Mr. DONOVAN. No, I do not.
Mr. ELY. Do you remember a man
named Call?
Mr. DONOVAN. I certainly do. He
is from Allentown, Pa. I tried to look him up after my discharge. I was passing
through his town. He was a corporal, later sergeant, I believe, buck sergeant.
Mr. ELY. Do you recall whether
he knew Oswald?
Mr. DONOVAN. He must have. Call
was another boy I played chess with.
Mr. ELY. Would you characterize
Call as an intellectual?
Mr. DONOVAN, I would
characterize Call as being modestly intelligent--
modestly not
referring to his degree of intelligence, but in reference to his character
concerning his intelligence.
Mr. ELY. Do you remember a man
named Delgado?
Mr. DONOVAN. I certainly
do--quite well. Delgado was on my crew. He was one of the boys that used to
speak with the Mexican ham operators to ask them to leave the air when we were
talking to aircraft. And Delgado had a command of Mexican more than Spanish.
Delgado was a very dependable boy.
Mr. ELY. Do you think he would
be able to help us concerning Oswald?
Mr. DONOVAN. He could tell you
much more about Oswald's personal life than I can, because he lived in the same
barracks area with him; Delgado played on the football team. He many times
served on the same crew with Oswald.
Mr. ELY. Do you remember a man
named Murray?
Mr. DONOVAN. Yes, Murray was a
clerk. He had a radar specialization number, but we used him as a clerk. And,
as I recall, he wanted to go back to medical school. I think he was from the
South somewhere, I believe. Very efficient, very intelligent, very competent,
capable man.
Mr. ELY. Do you recall whether
he knew Oswald well, or would it be fair to say that all the men on the crew
would know him?
Mr. DONOVAN. Well, Murray I
don't think you would say was on the crew so much. Murray, because of his
administrative ability, worked more in the office. Murray was married. And that
puts him in a little different light, too. I think he was very happily married.
At the end of the day he went home whereas Oswald stayed in the barracks area.
Mr. ELY. Do you remember a man
named Powers?
Mr. DONOVAN. The name rings a
bell, but I don't really remember him.
Mr. ELY. Osborne?
Mr. DONOVAN. Yes.
Mr. ELY. Do you recall whether
Osborne was an acquaintance of Oswald's?
Mr. DONOVAN. Yes. Osborne I knew
quite well. He played football with us for some time. He must have known him. I
don't know if he actually lived in the same barracks. He knew him. I don't know
how well he knew him.
Mr. ELY. Now, you have mentioned
Captain Trail to us, and also Sergeant Brown.
Mr. DONOVAN. Captain Trail was
Lieutenant Trail when I knew him. I think he is now Captain Trail.
Mr. ELY. Yes. Can you think of
any other names that neither you nor I have already mentioned?
Mr. DONOVAN. Yes; another fellow
that I am sure knew him was a fellow named Elmer Ellsworth Randolph. And he is
now a salesman for Brock Candy Co., somewhere in the Chicago area.
Another fellow that probably
knows him is now on active duty--Fred Walker. He is a captain. I believe Walker
knew him.
Captain Block, Robert Block, was the
operations officer at that time. I don't know if he would remember Oswald or
not.
Mr. ELY. Do you recall whether
Oswald ever went to night clubs? Bars?
Mr. DONOVAN. I think he used to
go down to the enlisted men's club to drink beer. I recall going down there one
night to talk to some boys on a disturbance and I vaguely remember him being
there, but I would not swear to that.
Mr. ELY. Would you have any
personal knowledge of whether he attended offpost bars or night clubs?
Mr. DONOVAN. No, I would not.
Mr. ELY. Did he drink more than
the average marine, the same amount, less?
Mr. DONOVAN. I believed not.
However, after the assassination of President Kennedy, I talked to Lieutenant
Trail on the phone and Trail told me that he had been mixed up in some drinking
bouts in Japan.
Mr. ELY. But from your own----
Mr. DONOVAN. From my own
personal knowledge, I do not know that he drank to excess.
Mr. ELY. But he did drink some?
Mr. DONOVAN. I don't ever recall
seeing him drink. But as I recall the
conversation, I believe he did. But I don't know that for a fact.
Mr. ELY. Well, in that case, Mr.
Donovan, I think that is all the questions I have for you.
Do you think of anything else
that might be helpful to us in trying to figure out what sort of a man Oswald
was?
Mr. DONOVAN. There is one name
that you did not mention that I know that lived in the same barracks he did.
Cpl. Sherman Cooley. He also served on that crew. I served with Cooley
overseas, and in Santa Ana. Cooley is another fellow that was intelligent, but
very modest about it.
The reason I remember his first
name, it always struck me as strange that someone named Sherman would live in
Louisiana.
Another boy's name is Dejanovich. That is
phonetic. Dejanovich lived in Chicago, and after I was discharged from the
service I called him on the phone a couple of times, passing through there.
Another guy that would know him
is a boy named Jurarado, I believe. I don't know how much these boys knew about
him. They are just people that were there at the same time.
Mr. ELY. Your mention of
Dejanovich reminds me of a question I intended to ask you.
Do you recall any of Oswald's
former marines calling him Oswaldovich, or anything that sounded like that?
Mr. DONOVAN. No.
Mr. ELY. Do you recall fellow
marines referring to him as "Comrade?"
Mr. DONOVAN. No.
Mr. ELY. Well, if you have
nothing more to add, Mr. Donovan, on behalf of the Commission, I would like to
thank you for giving us your time and testimony. It has been very helpful.