Mr. Tomlinson. Well, really, I can't be positive, just to be perfectly honest about it, I can't be positive, because I really didn't pay that much attention to it. The stretcher was on the elevator and I pushed it off of there and I believe we made one or two calls up before I straightened out the stretcher up against the wall.

Mr. Specter. When you say "one or two calls," what do you mean by that?

Mr. Tomlinson. Went to pick up the technician from the second floor to bring him down to the ground floor to get blood.

Mr. Specter. And when you say before you straightened the stretcher up, what do you mean by that?

Mr. Tomlinson. Well, we just rolled them out of the way where we had some room on the elevator—that's a small elevator.

Mr. Specter. So, when you rolled them out of the elevator, when you rolled the stretcher out of the elevator, did you place it against the wall at that time?

Mr. Tomlinson. No.

Mr. Specter. Were both of these stretchers constructed in the same way?

Mr. Tomlinson. Similar—yes.

Mr. Specter. Will you describe the appearance of the stretcher with reference to what it was made of and how many shelves it had, and that sort of thing?