Mr. Zapruder. Well, yes.
Mr. Liebeler. From the direction behind you?
Mr. Zapruder. Yes, actually—I couldn't say what I thought at the moment, where they came from—after the impact of the tragedy was really what I saw and I started and I said—yelling, "They've killed him"—I assumed that they came from there, because as the police started running back of me, it looked like it came from the back of me.
Mr. Liebeler. But you didn't form any opinion at that time as to what direction the shots did come from actually?
Mr. Zapruder. No.
Mr. Liebeler. And you indicated that they could have come also from behind or from any other direction except perhaps from the left, because they could have been from behind or even from the front.
Mr. Zapruder. Well, it could have been—in other words if you have a point—you could hit a point from any place, as far as that's concerned. I have no way of determining what direction the bullet was going.
Mr. Liebeler. Did you form any opinion about the direction from which the shots came by the sound, or were you just upset by the thing you had seen?
Mr. Zapruder. No, there was too much reverberation. There was an echo which gave me a sound all over. In other words that square is kind of—it had a sound all over.
Mr. Liebeler. And with the buildings around there, too?