Mr. Whaley. Well, they—when they walked over the line and they stopped him, No. 2 was over his head, but he was pulling on both of the other men on each side and arguing with this detective, so he didn't stay under any certain number.
He was moving like that.
Mr. Belin. Did you ever see him later on television?
Mr. Whaley. No, sir; I didn't.
Mr. Belin. You never did see his picture in the paper?
Mr. Whaley. I saw his picture in the paper the next morning, sir.
Mr. Belin. That would have been Sunday morning, the 24th?
Mr. Whaley. I guess it was, if you say it was, sir.
Mr. Belin. I don't want to——
Mr. Whaley. I don't want to get you mixed up and get your whole investigation mixed up through my ignorance, but a good defense attorney could take me apart. I get confused. I try to tell you exactly what happened, to the best of my ability, when they brought Oswald out in the lineup of four. He was the third man out. I don't know which way they count them.