Commander Humes. I have none, sir, no knowledge.

Mr. McCloy. No knowledge that any were taken?

Representative Ford. May I ask what size are the pictures to which you refer?

Commander Humes. We exposed both black and white and color negatives, Congressman. They were exposed in the morgue during the examination. They were not developed. The kodachrome negatives when developed would be 405. They were in film carriers or cassettes, as were the black and white. Of course they could be magnified.

Representative Ford. Have those been examined by personnel at Bethesda?

Commander Humes. No, sir. We exposed these negatives; we turned them over. Here I must ask the counsel again for advice—to the Secret Service.

Mr. Specter. Yes; it was the Secret Service.

Commander Humes. They were turned over to the Secret Service in their cassettes unexposed, and I have not seen any of them since. This is the photographs. The X-rays were developed in our X-ray department on the spot that evening, because we had to see those right then as part of our examination, but the photographs were made for the record and for other purposes.

Representative Ford. But they had never been actually developed for viewing.

Commander Humes. I do not know, sir.