Mr. Sawyer. I rebroadcast that description. That is what that means.
Mr. Belin. I then notice on this radio log—I don't see anything more under 9, at least until after the, well, it is down until we have gone as far as 1:30 p.m., I don't see anything else, do you, sir?
Mr. Sawyer. No. There is another broadcast in there somewhere, though. I put out another description on the colored boy that worked in that department.
Mr. Belin. What do you mean the colored boy that worked in that depository?
Mr. Sawyer. He is one that had a previous record in the narcotics, and he was supposed to have been a witness to the man being on that floor. He was supposed to have been a witness to Oswald being there.
Mr. Belin. Would Charles Givens have been that boy?
Mr. Sawyer. Yes, I think that is the name, and I put out a description on him.
Mr. Belin. How do you know he was supposed to be a witness on that?
Mr. Sawyer. Somebody told me that. Somebody came to me with the information. And again, that particular party, whoever it was, I don't know. I remember that a deputy sheriff came up to me who had been over taking these affidavits, that I sent them over there, and he came over from the sheriff's office with a picture and a description of this colored boy and he said that he was supposed to have worked at the Texas Book Depository, and he was the one employee who was missing, or he was missing from the building.
He wasn't accounted for, and that he was suppose to have some information about the man that did the shooting.