Mr. McCloy. Questioning of his wife.

Mr. Fritz. That is right.

Mr. Ball. In the light of your experience in this case, do you think you should alter your regulations with the press, have a little more discipline when the press are around?

Mr. Fritz. We can with the local press. We can't do much with those people that we don't know from those foreign countries, and from distant States, they don't ask us. They just write what they hear of and we read it.

Mr. Ball. No; but I mean in the physical control of your plant there?

Mr. Fritz. There at city hall?

Mr. Ball. Do you think you should alter your policy?

Mr. Fritz. We think we can control it normally, because those officers, those people from the press there wouldn't come in and start taking pictures without permission. They wouldn't do that without asking, and then usually I ask a prisoner because some prisoners don't want their pictures taken and sometimes they do, if they want it taken why it is all right. Sometimes we don't let them take them at all, depending on circumstances.

Mr. Ball. Do you permit television interrogation of your prisoners in jail?

Mr. Fritz. No, sir.