The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
. V <A- i #. /A. / ' \ / : S 205 E. 42nd Sf. v /.</\ /:( V\ \ New York 17, n S-'Si * /v "' r*. \ Uxiflgton-2-90-^ ^.--v ?;p /••/"•- -<• -v .••■ s, ;.*/ $ <K \ *-**.*+ 4 <&••+£ '+\J- •-•'V d' i.ytx* V.-.wVJi *c, - \ r n ri <v* a o se.i *m t£ r= o '-< : « . •' •' .7 FOR RELEASE: JANUARY 28 EX-FBI AGENT CHARGES BUREAU KEPT OSWALD DATA FROM SECRET SERVICE NEW YORK, Jar*. 23--Charges that the Federal Bureau of Investigation failed to transmit information it possessed on Lee Harvey Oswald to the Secret Service and the Dallas police were published today in an article written by a former FBI agent. William W. Turner, employed by the Bureau for IcH years, conducted a private investigation in Dallas immediately following the assassination of President Kennedy. Kis article, "The FBI Could Have Saved Fresident Kennedy's Life," appears in the current issue of SAGA magazine. According uo Turner, a Dallas FBI agent had interviewed Oswald 10 days prior to the assassination. Two FBI men, whose names Turner says he knows, had talked originally to Oswald's mother in an effort to locate him in Dallas. And Oswald's Russian wife was visited twice during October by FBI agents. Although the Dallas police had no record of any sort on Oswald, his name was in the files of the FBI's Dallas office. Turner reveals that a "thick file" on the accused assassin was begun by the Federal agency after Oswald applied for Russian citizenship in Moscow in 1959• "it was started at the urging of the State Department's security unit, and it was reviewed and brought up to date every 30 days during 1962 and- 1963. Here, the FBI did its. duty," Turner writes. -more- 435