Miss Bowron. Mrs. Nelson spoke to me and told me that there had been two English reporters in Dallas who had been asking about me, and she told them where to get in touch with me, and the next day they came to the emergency room and wanted to speak to me and I said I couldn't tell them anything other than I was from England, gave them my home address, and the fact that I had been present and I was the one who went out to the car and brought the President in and being with him until they finished, and that was all that I told them.
Mr. Specter. Did you give them any information beyond that?
Miss Bowron. No, sir; and they told me that there would probably be some English reporters calling on my parents at home, and I am the only child and my mother worries, so I called home the next—that night and told my parents that I had been on duty and that there would probably be some reporters calling on them, and they weren't to worry about it but they weren't to say anything that—except that I had been on duty and that was all.
Mr. Specter. Have you been interviewed by any representative of the Federal Government prior to today?
Miss Bowron. Yes, sir.
Mr. Specter. By whom?
Miss Bowron. I don't really know—he was an FBI agent.
Mr. Specter. And when was that?
Miss Bowron. It was a week or two, I think, after the assassination.
Mr. Specter. And what did he ask you and what did you tell him?