Mr. Specter. And were the views you expressed to me in our conversation before the deposition and on the record during the course of the deposition different in any way with the testimony which you have provided here this morning?
Dr. Carrico. No, sir; they were not.
Mr. Specter. Dr. Carrico, have you changed your opinion in any way concerning your observations or conclusions about the situation with respect to President Kennedy at any time since November 22, 1963?
Dr. Carrico. No.
Mr. Specter. Do you have any notes or writings of any sort in your possession concerning your participation in the treatment of President Kennedy?
Dr. Carrico. None other than the letter to my children I mentioned to you.
Mr. Specter. Will you state briefly the general nature of that for the Commission here today, please.
Dr. Carrico. This is just a letter written to my children to be read by them later, saying what happened, how I felt about it. And maybe why it happened, and maybe it would do them some good later.
Mr. Specter. Did you also make a written report which was made a part of the records of Parkland Hospital which you have identified for the record during the deposition proceeding?
Dr. Carrico. Yes; I did.