Mrs. Hill. I would like to see this telecast or hear that questioning again because there's something about it that keeps in the back of my mind——
Mr. Specter. But you can't put your finger on what it is?
Mrs. Hill. No.
Mr. Specter. But you are annoyed or bothered or perplexed with it or confused by that?
Mrs. Hill. Yes; I have been.
Mr. Specter. Now, have you told me everything that you have to say about that television interview?
Mrs. Hill. Yes.
Mr. Specter. Now, moving on to the question about Mark Lane, what did you tell him other than that which you have told me here today?
Mrs. Hill. He asked me where we were taken and I told him in the pressroom, that we didn't know it was the pressroom at the time, and that we didn't know we couldn't leave and because they kept standing across the door, and the first time we really—we were getting tired of it, I mean, we had been down there quite a while and we were getting tired of it and we wanted to leave and this is what I told him, and so some man came in and offered Mary a sum, I think—say—$10,000 or something like this for this picture.
We realized that—they said, "Don't sell the picture." He was a representative of either Post or Life, and they said, "Don't sell that picture until our representatives have contacted you or a lawyer or something." Anyway, we realized at that time we didn't have that picture, that it had been taken from us. I mean, we had let Featherstone look at it, you know, but we told no one they could reproduce it. They said, "Would you let us look at it and see if it could be reproduced?" We said, "Yes; you could look at it," we thought it was—you know, it was fuzzy and everything, but we were wanting to keep them and we suddenly realized we didn't have that picture, and that was quite a bit of money and we were getting pretty excited about it, and Mary was getting scared——