Oswald Code-17 CROSSED OUT WORD KGB and MVD ANAGRAM

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Transcript of Oswald Code-17 CROSSED OUT WORD KGB and MVD ANAGRAM

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The following is an excerpt from an early version of the Oswald Code. The full version can be found on AMAZON.

PAPERBACK VERSION (black and white but pictures display correctly)

KINDLE VERSION (this one is in color)

THE LETTERS KGB AND MVD WERE HIDDEN IN OSWALDS ADDRESS BOOK

Oswald exhibited different degrees intensity in his cross-outs. The first degree of cross-out can be termed retriveable. Here we see the information as if it had never been deleted. The above entry concerns Pauline Bates, a stenographer Oswald hired to type up some of his recollections of Soviet life. There was nothing to hide in this entry since Bates had no intelligence community connection.

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The next degree of intensity of cross-out may still be retrievable if you have are aware of the general framework of Oswald’s life. For example “Amer Ex” appears above “Rail tickets.” The words “Am Ex” appeared in another address book page.

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The next degree of the intensity of Oswald’s cross-outs was designed to make the words almost completely illegible; however, the nature of some of the cross-outs can be determined from context. The words Oswald crossed-out above had something to do with his having been given permission to remain in the Soviet Union as a “Person without citizenship.” They are all separated by wavy lines. I detect the letters KGB as having been crossed-out.

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On Monday, October 19, 1959, Oswald was interviewed by Radio Moscow. In a Question and Answer sheet that Oswald prepared upon his re-entry to the United States he stated:

Did you make statements against the U.S. there? yes. What about that type [tape] recording? I made a recording for Radio

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Moscow which was broadcast the following Sunday, October 25, 1959.

In another part of this Q and A Oswald denied having broadcast anti-American propaganda. Apparently he felt that having done so would prevent his re-entry into the United States. Marina Oswald questioned her husband about the radio broadcast he had made. Oswald explained Leo Setyaev had helped him make some money by assisting in the broadcast. Oswald said he criticized the United States and praised Russia as a better place to live. Leo Setyaev or Lev Setyaev was either a KGB agent or someone with close ties to the CIA who was married to a defector known as “Moscow Molly.”

Moscow Molly broadcasts an English language program on Radio Moscow, reportedly containing surprisingly factual and intimate details of life at U.S. bases in the Alaskan Command, ostensibly calculated to destroy troop morale at these bases.

James Angleton denied that the CIA had any information on Setyaev other than what the FBI had amassed. Angleton commented on the telephone number that appeared twice in this entry:

This agency has no additional information on the Moscow telephone number V-3-65-88 which Oswald connected with Lev Setyayev of Radio Moscow. The 1959 Moscow City telephone directory is unavailable, and the 1960 directory does not include any numbers in the V-3-65- series; however it is a plausible Moscow telephone number. A number similar to V-3-65-93 was given by an employee of Radio Moscow to one CIA source as his office number, and to another source as his home number.

The North American Service of Radio Moscow came on the air about 7:00 p.m. E. S. T. on October 25, 1959, broadcasting until about midnight. The programming was repeated approximately every three and one half hours. I had a short wave radio in 1959, and as someone taken in by Communist propaganda, was a nightly listener to Radio Moscow. I distinctly remember hearing an interview with a defector from Texas (Marguerite Oswald moved to Fort Worth, Texas in July 1956) who complained about the economic conditions there. At the time I thought to myself, "They must be dirt poor in his area of Texas for him to expect a higher standard of living in the

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USSR." It must have been Oswald.

Finally a page of Oswald’s address book contains Russian grammatical rules. Why did Oswald go to the trouble of crossing out certain letters to the extent that he did? What is encoded here? What the purpose of the vertical cross-outs? Were these letters the key to the cipher?

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The MVD was the Secret police after Lavrenty Beria merged the MGB into the MVD in March 1953. Within a year Beria's downfall caused the MVD to be split up again; after that, the MVD retained its "internal security" (police) functions, while the new KGB took on "state security" (secret police) functions. Nikita Khrushchev called for the dismissal of the All-Union MVD. The Ministry ceased to exist in January 1960. Oswald entered the Soviet Union in October 1959.