Commander Humes. That is right.
Mr. Dulles. So he might have been on the stretcher the whole time, is that your view?
The Chairman. He said he had no view. He wasn't there, he doesn't know anything about it.
Mr. Dulles. Yes. I wonder if there is other evidence of this.
Mr. Specter. There has been other evidence, Mr. Dulles. If I may say at this point, we shall produce later, subject to sequential proof, evidence that the stretcher on which this bullet was found was the stretcher of Governor Connally. We have a sequence of events on the transmission of that stretcher which ties that down reasonably closely, so that on the night of the autopsy itself, as the information I have been developing indicates, the thought preliminarily was that was from President Kennedy's stretcher, and that is what led to the hypothesis which we have been exploring about, but which has since been rejected. But at any rate the evidence will show that it was from Governor Connally's stretcher that the bullet was found.
Mr. Dulles. So this bullet is still missing?
Mr. Specter. That is the subject of some theories I am about to get into. That is an elusive subject, but Dr. Humes has some views on it, and we might just as well go into those now.
Mr. McCloy. Before he gets into that, may I ask a question?
The Chairman. Surely, go right ahead.
Mr. McCloy. Quite apart from the President's clothing, now directing your attention to the flight of the bullet, quite apart from the evidence given by the President's clothing, you, I believe, indicated that the flight of the bullet was from the back, from above and behind. It took roughly the line which is shown on your Exhibit 385.