“Oswald moves to New Orleans and becomes involved in the Fair Play for Cuba organization in which he appears to be the only member - and once again, coincidentally, has his office downstairs from the local FBI field office.”
Not quite. His office was is the same building as Guy Bannister’s office, but Bannister was a former (retired) FBI agent. It was his office as a “private detective” (which some have speculated was actually a CIA field office). Oswald may actually have been operating out of this exact office too, not downstairs. The building had addresses on 2 different cross streets and the address that Oswald used may have been the alternate address for Bannister’s office. But I’ve never seen anyone settle that point for certain.
The part that fascinates me during this period, was the lengthy film interview with Oswald. It’s very professionally done and Oswald is quite articulate but he doesn’t seem to believe in what he’s saying. He seems to be enjoying spoofing the interviewer and he is a good deal smarter than we have been told in the narrative of the “lone, crazed communist killer”.
It’s wildly incongruous that a supposed future assassin has this long interview on the record.