Mr. Ball. Do you have that jail——

Mr. Fritz. Wait just one second. No, sir; that was in the jail.

Mr. Ball. Is the jail wired so that you can listen to conversations?

Mr. Fritz. No, sir; it isn't. Sometimes I wish I could hear some of the things they say but we don't.

Mr. Ball. In other words, you don't monitor conversations?

Mr. Fritz. No, sir; we let them talk to anyone they want to. If they are allowed to use the telephone, of course, they are allowed free use of it. Sometimes they do a little better than that. Sometimes they place a long distance call and charge it to the city.

Mr. McCloy. When you went in, Captain Fritz, and you saw the site which Oswald is alleged to have fired the shot from——

Mr. Fritz. Yes, sir.

Mr. McCloy. Did you see any signs of a lunch there, a chicken there?

Mr. Fritz. No, sir; I will tell you where that story about the chicken comes from. At the other window above there, where people in days past, you know had eaten their lunches, they left chicken bones and pieces of bread, all kinds of things up and down there. That isn't where he was at all. He was in a different window, so I don't think those things have anything to do with it. Someone wrote a story about it in the papers, and we have got all kinds of bad publicity from it and they wrote in telling us how to check those chicken bones and how to get them from the stomach and everything.