Mr. Whaley. That is all, sir, except he said when we got to where he wanted to go he said, "This will do fine," when I pulled over.

Mr. Ball. Now, in the police lineup now, and this man was talking to the police and telling them he wanted a lawyer, and that they were trying to, you say he said they were trying to, frame him or something of that sort——

Mr. Whaley. Well, the way he talked that they were doing him an injustice by putting him out there dressed different than these other men he was out there with.

Mr. Ball. Now, did anyone, any policeman, who was there, say anything to him?

Mr. Whaley. Yes, sir; Detective Sergeant Leavelle, I believe it was, told him that they had, would get him his lawyers on the phone, that they didn't think they were doing him wrong by putting him out there dressed up.

Representative Ford. Did the man you identified have any reaction when they brought the group out, did he have any reaction that you noticed at the time you identified him?

Mr. Whaley. Only that he was the only one that had the bruise on his head, sir. The only one who acted surly. In other words, I told this Commission this morning you wouldn't have had to have known who it was to have picked him out by the way he acted. But he was the man that I carried in my taxicab. I told them when I identified him. I didn't identify him as the man who shot the President. I identified him as the man who rode from the Greyhound to 1500 North Beckley with me.

Representative Ford. Did you point him out with your hand?

Mr. Whaley. No, sir; I did not. They asked me which number he was standing under and he was standing under No. 2.

Representative Ford. Could he hear you make this identification?