Mr. Specter. Did she eventually sell the picture, by the way?

Mrs. Hill. She sold the rights, the publishing rights of it, not the original picture, but they had already—AP and UP had already picked it up because Featherstone stole it.

Mr. Specter. Do you know what she sold those rights for?

Mrs. Hill. I think it was $600.

Mr. Specter. What did you tell Mark Lane besides about the picture?

Mrs. Hill. This is it.

Mr. Specter. Fine, go ahead.

Mrs. Hill. Anyway, when I realized we didn't have that picture and Mary was getting upset about that—by that time I had realized we were in a pressroom and that he had no right to be holding us and he had no authority and that we could get out of there, and they kept standing in front of the door, and I told him—I said, "Get out." We kept asking him for our picture, and where it was, and he said, "We'll get it back—we'll get it back. And so I jerked away and ran out of the door and as I did, there was a Secret Service man. Now, this I was told—that he was a Secret Service man, and he said, "Do you have a red raincoat?" And, I said, "Yes; it's in yonder. Let me go." I was intent on finding someone to get that picture back and I said as I walked out, "I can get someone big enough to get it back for us." He said, "Does your friend have a blue raincoat?" And I said, "Yes; she's in there." He said, "Here they are," to somebody else and they told us that they had been looking for us.

Mr. Specter. Who told you that?

Mrs. Hill. This man.