Mr. McCloy. Does that mean the laboratory people had already come there then?

Mr. Fritz. He came down from where he had been; he was on the same floor checking the empty cartridges, and he came back.

Mr. McCloy. Oh, yes.

Mr. Fritz. To the back, when I called him, and he came back there and checked the rifle; yes, sir.

Mr. McCloy. When you went up to the sixth floor from which Oswald apparently had fired these shots, what did it look like there, what was the—how were things arranged there? Was there anything in the nature of a gun rest there or anything that could be used as a gun rest?

Mr. Fritz. You mean up in the corner where he shot from, from the window?

Mr. McCloy. Yes.

Mr. Fritz. Yes, sir; there were some boxes stacked there and I believe one box, one small box I believe was in the window, and another box was on the floor. There were some boxes stacked to his right that more or less blinded him from the rest of the floor. If anyone else had been on the floor I doubt if they could have seen where he was sitting.

Mr. McCloy. Did you see anything other——

Mr. Fritz. Lieutenant Day, of course, made a detailed description of all of that and he can give it to you much better than I can.