Mr. Belin. I wonder if, using your memorandum to refresh your recollection, you would just say what was said by any of the people there and just cover the whole thing? I will take it up section by section. Just start out. This started around 9:30, is that it, on Sunday morning?

Mr. Holmes. Yes, sir. Now, this is my impression, not what he said.

Mr. Belin. I notice the first paragraph, you have an impression on that? I wonder perhaps what we might do is, I am going to see if I have a copy of this, and if I can, to attach just as a—is this an extra copy that you have here?

Mr. Holmes. Yes; I guess you can. Let me tear that top off.

Mr. Belin. I am going to mark this as "Holmes Deposition Exhibit No. 4." This is a memorandum of your interview?

Mr. Holmes. That I dictated on December 17, 1963.

Mr. Belin. That is about 4 weeks after the interview took place; is that correct?

Mr. Holmes. That's correct.

Mr. Belin. Do you have any notes from which you dictated this interview?

Mr. Holmes. I had a few notes. I had no reason for such a statement except that about that time the FBI asked me—they learned that I had been in on this interrogation, and asked me if I would object to giving them a statement as to what went on in that room, and this is my statement. Part of it was from notes and part of it was from memory.