Mr. Stern. How about comments he made to you?

Mr. Leavelle. I know—I think possibly at one time he—that morning that I was bringing him down on Sunday morning that he may have asked me where he was going or if he was going back to Captain Fritz' office that morning, but aside from that, I do not recall anything else that he may have said or anything that I may have said to him in the course of the day.

Mr. Stern. Do you recall any complaints that he registered, any statements he made about his treatment, or——

Mr. Leavelle. No. I don't think he made any to us that morning we were moving him.

Mr. Stern. Did you receive the telegram that arrived Sunday morning or that was there Sunday morning about the offer?

Mr. Leavelle. I had occasion to see it. I do not recall what it was. I think it is a matter of record somewhere.

Mr. Stern. It was there at the Sunday morning interrogation?

Mr. Leavelle. Yes; it was there and, in fact, I know the captain and I talked about it there a minute before I went up and got him, talked about informing him of this lawyer's request or offer. I said "Why not let him have the telegram, show him the telegram, let him read it himself," so, that's what the captain done—let him have the telegram.

Mr. Stern. Do you recall whether any of the witnesses at the showups at which you were present said that they had seen Oswald on television before they got to the police headquarters?

Mr. Leavelle. Well, I think it would have been impossible for anybody, any of them to see him with the exception of the two bus—cabdrivers. Now, the others may have, I don't recall, but the others all came down on the day of the assassination so I don't believe that they would have, but I know Helen Markham would not have because she was taken directly to city hall and had been there ever since it happened, so she would not, and I do not believe Mr. Callaway and the Negro porter, Sam Guinyard, would have had an opportunity, either.