Mr. Specter. November 22.
Mr. Kellerman. No. November 22 is when they were in the morgue with me. They interviewed me in the office that—it was around the 27th. This was after the funeral.
Mr. Specter. Did they have any conversation with you about these events in the morgue?
Mr. Kellerman. Not that I recall, sir.
Mr. Specter. Did you have a discussion with either of those gentlemen about anything while you were at the morgue on November 22?
Mr. Kellerman. The only thing I can recall discussionwise—I just forget which one it was, one of the two—this was before we even knew that a shell had been found from the hole in the President's shoulder. We couldn't determine what happened to it. They couldn't find it in the morgue; they couldn't find any leeway as to whatever happened to the shell when it hit the President's shoulder; where did it go. So our contention was that while he was on the stretcher in Dallas, and the neurosurgeon was working over him no doubt with pressure on the heart, this thing worked itself out.
Mr. Specter. When you say "our contention," what do you mean by that?
Mr. Kellerman. One of these agents—I forget which one it was; it could have been Sibert or O'Neill, but I am not sure.
Mr. Specter. Did what?
Mr. Kellerman. We—our discussion or my discussion.