Mr. Specter. Do you have anything to add by way of any detail to the findings reported by Dr. Olivier in his testimony here earlier today?
Dr. Light. No; I think he covered it very thoroughly.
Mr. Specter. And as to the conclusions and opinions which he expressed, do you agree or disagree, to some extent, on his conclusions?
Dr. Light. I agree in general at least. I am not quite so certain about some of the things, but generally I certainly agree with what he said.
Mr. Dulles. What are the things on which you are not quite so certain?
Dr. Light. For example, I am not quite as sure in my mind as I believe he is that the bullet that struck the Governor was almost certainly one which had hit something else first. I believe it could have produced that wound even though it hadn't hit the President or any other person or object first.
Mr. Dulles. That is the wound, then, in the thigh?
Dr. Light. No; in the chest.
Mr. Dulles. I was thinking that the wound in the thigh—let me start again. As I understand the previous testimony, Dr. Olivier would have expected the wound in the thigh to be more serious if it had not hit some object.
Dr. Light. Yes.