Mr. Specter. Were there any other items of wearing apparel such as shorts or undershirt?
Mr. Greer. Yes, sir; his shorts and that brace he wore, whatever it was, and his sox and shoes, and shirt, and his trousers, and his suit coat.
Mr. Specter. Are you able to state with certainty that there was no undershirt?
Mr. Greer. Yes, sir; there was no undershirt. I am sure there was no undershirt. I would have to say it to the best of my recollection, there was no undershirt. I had been with him so many times and I knew he didn't normally wear an undershirt because I had heard him one time previously, I offered him a coat.
He said, "I have an undershirt on today," it was at some ballgame. He normally didn't wear an undershirt.
Mr. Specter. Can you describe with more particularity the brace you just said he was wearing?
Mr. Greer. It looked like a, I would say, a corset-type brace, maybe 6 inches wide, he wore it around his, down low around his, haunches, a little lower than the waist, probably, just probably below his belt he wore it there. It was something he normally wore, and I would guess, but I would say it was of a soft, maybe a kind of corset-type material, maybe elastic or something like that support.
Mr. Specter. Mr. Greer, when your automobile arrived at Parkland, was there any medical individual awaiting your arrival?
Mr. Greer. I can't remember—there were—who brought the stretchers out. There were some hospital people there, but who they were, I never got—I couldn't identify or knew who they were. There were some medical people there; yes.
Mr. Specter. Where were they when you first saw hospital personnel?