Mr. Dhority. No, I just asked him if he saw the man there that he picked up, and he said it was the No. 2 man.
I don't know whether you've talked to him or not.
Mr. Ball. Yes, I have.
Mr. Dhority. But to me, he is the type of person that the longer you talk to him—he just goes and he will try, to me, he will try to say, "Well, I'm sure it was," but then he would go on with something else.
Mr. Ball. Well, what I want to know is this—he identified Oswald, but did he tell you where he had seen Oswald before and what Oswald had done?
Mr. Dhority. Well, just like that affidavit there, he says he thought he picked him up down there close to the Book Depository on Elm.
Mr. Ball. Did he tell you that? As he went out on Marsalis that some man on the bus had grinned at a woman when the woman mentioned that the President had been shot?
Mr. Dhority. I don't know exactly for word to word—it's in the affidavit there.
Mr. Ball. This is the story he told you that's in the affidavit; is that right?
Mr. Dhority. Yes, sir; after he gave me the affidavit and we were walking back across the street to the bus, he said. "Well, I think he went out on Marsalis with me." He said, "He could have got off sooner."