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OH:
I don’t think that, I don’t know how much contact she kept with our friend,
our other friends, urn, she may have, certainly in the early days we still tried to connect, and do, but urn, you know, especially when she went through some weird stuff earlier on, like the language and all that stuff. I think that people thought it was a little odd.

SF: Okay, so

JO: You’d gone, urn, pretty much from high school and you went up to 89 side
one, and then you covered some of Dallas, can you concentrate a little bit from, I know she moved in December of 93 and beginning of 94 to Olearwater. Can you cover that time period for us, from 94 to the time she expired in, what,

SF:
Yeah, I think she was just there about the movers and shakers and all
OH:
Yeah, shewas
JO: What kind of conversations did she have on the phone, and did she happen
to call you and tell you about her B and E trials, or breaking into her apartment?

OH:
Yes, yeah, we talked about that.
JO:
Can you tell me a little bit about that? Start with the beginning of 94 if you
will.

OH:
Okay. Urn, I talked with her right after she got there, and she gave me her
address, and •whatever, although I can’t find it, but anyway, she was realty excited about the auditing, that it was a whole different level, I mentioned that, and the people, she was very excited, she said, “you know I’m just a little girl from Dallas and I’m going out with these people who are really, I don’t know, she was very excited, it was very exciting for her and she was having a great time, urn, the other stuff that I remember talking about as far as Oleaiwater goes, is
urn, later, I remember her saying that the work was much harder there. Her
work, her job, urn, her whole company had moved there to go to new training and auditing and whatever.

SF:
They closed
OH:
That was the publishing company
SF:
They closed
OH:
Closes in Dallas and the whole group of them moved to, see, she had her
support group shifted there and that’s everything, all her, urn,
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