Mr. Scoggins. If he did I couldn't see it, and I don't think he ever got to his pistol from what I saw.
Mr. Belin. Did you see the man with the gun as he opened his gun, as he was going to the west on—up 10th Street at all after the shooting?
Mr. Scoggins. No, I didn't see him.
Mr. Belin. After you went around to look for the man, did you find him at all?
Mr. Scoggins. No. We drove around and asked several people, but we did not see anybody that looked like him.
Mr. Belin. Then what did you do?
Mr. Scoggins. Well, by that time there was more policemen there than you can shake a stick at. They were all over that place, and we stopped the cab.
Mr. Belin. At about what time, do you know offhand?
Mr. Scoggins. About 1:30, I guess, approximately 1:30; between 1:30 and 1:35, I would say. We cruised around several blocks looking for him, and we—one of these police cars came by and this fellow who was with me stopped it, and we got back in the car and went back up to the scene, and he give them the pistol, and that time is when I found out he wasn't an officer.
Mr. Belin. Then what happened, or what did you do?