Mr. Fischer. I told them that I didn't think it could be him because—uh—he didn't—he didn't have near enough hair, it didn't look like to me.

Mr. Belin. What about his build?

Mr. Fischer. And that, too. His face was just a little—uh—fat; whereas-uh—Oswald's picture was rather a slender face and neck.

Mr. Belin. Did the man you saw in the window have a high forehead or a low forehead—or do you remember?

Mr. Fischer. I can't—I can't remember seeing that—uh—that well. I don't know if I could have—if I saw it now, whether I could tell you whether he had a large forehead or not.

Mr. Belin. Do you have any estimate of how far you were from that window when you saw him?

Mr. Fischer. Uh—from the point where I was standing when I saw him in the window to him, it must have been, I would say, at least a hundred feet.

Mr. Belin. All right. Now, did you ever tell anyone, or might you have told them, that you saw this person a minute or two before you saw the motorcade, rather than as you told us here today, 15 or 20 seconds before you first saw the motorcade?

Mr. Fischer. Yes.

Mr. Belin. Did you ever tell anyone it was a minute or two before you saw the motorcade?