Mr. Specter. And do you know which doctor that was?
Mr. Kellerman. Not by name or sight; no, sir.
Mr. Specter. How many doctors did you see at that time?
Mr. Kellerman. The room was full.
Mr. Specter. Who were the individuals who brought the stretchers on wheels, if you know?
Mr. Kellerman. Agents who were in the followup car, police officers who were ahead of us on motorcycles.
Mr. Specter. Mr. Kellerman, did you state how long the autopsy lasted when you testified this morning?
Mr. Kellerman. No; I didn't. However, this is going to be an assumption on time; I think I can pin it pretty well.
Mr. Specter. Give us your best estimate on that, please.
Mr. Kellerman. Let's come back to the period of our arrival at Andrews Air Force Base, which was 5:58 p.m. at night. By the time it took us to take the body from the plane into the ambulance, and a couple of carloads of staff people who followed us, we may have spent 15 minutes there. And in driving from Andrews to the U.S. Naval Hospital, I would judge, a good 45 minutes. So there is 7 o'clock. We went immediately over, without too much delay on the outside of the hospital, into the morgue. The Navy people had their staff in readiness right then. There wasn't anybody to call. They were all there. So at the latest, 7:30, they began to work on the autopsy. And, as I said, we left the hospital at 3:56 in the morning. Let's give the undertaker people 2 hours. So they were through at 2 o'clock in the morning. I would judge offhand that they worked on the autopsy angle 4½, 5 hours.