Mr. Leavelle. Well, of course. I asked him if he—if the man that he remembered or saw there, whatever he was identifying him for there was up there and he said "Yes, the man in the T-shirt." Whether he was doing all the talking or not wouldn't make any difference, he still knew him.
Mr. Ball. What did Scoggins say?
Mr. Leavelle. He said practically the same thing—the man in the T-shirt was the—or the No. 3 man was the man he had saw do the shooting.
Mr. Ball. Who said that?
Mr. Leavelle. That would have been Scoggins.
Mr. Ball. Did Whaley say—tell you whether or not he had ever seen this man before?
Mr. Leavelle. He was supposed to have seen him I believe, but I do not recall what the circumstances were under which he saw him right offhand.
Mr. Ball. Where Scoggins saw him you remember, in other words, though?
Mr. Leavelle. Yes; in other words, he was the one who said he was sitting there eating a sack of lunch parked near the corner when the shooting occurred.
Mr. Ball. Now, on November 24, on Sunday morning, did you return to work about the same time, 8 o'clock, or so?