Mr. Stovall. After that we went—we called on the phone—Rose did—trying to find this Wesley Frazier, who was this Mrs. Randle's brother to talk to him about this package that his sister said Oswald had put in his car that morning. Rose checked around and finally located him at a clinic in Irving. He called and found out where Wesley Frazier was—he called the Irving Police Department and talked to Detective McCabe out there and told him what the situation was and McCabe told us to call him back later and he would see if he couldn't get ahold of him out there and so we called him back in 15 or 20 minutes, I guess, and he said that he had the boy at the Police Department out there.
Mr. Ball. You went out there and talked to him?
Mr. Stovall. Yes, sir.
Mr. Ball. And you also searched their home, didn't you?
Mr. Stovall. Yes, we did.
Mr. Ball. And then you brought Linnie Randle and Wesley Frazier into Dallas and took statements from them?
Mr. Stovall. Yes, sir; we didn't take the affidavits from them, but I don't recall who did, but after the affidavits were taken, we started back to Irving with them, they also had a minister from their church with them, I believe. We started back to Irving and we got about halfway, I guess, and they called us on the radio to return to the station with the witnesses and we came back and Rose called the captain from the basement phone down there and he said he wanted to take Wesley Frazier up and run him on the polygraph, and he agreed to this and so we took him up there, and we didn't have a man on the polygraph at that time. I think he left around 9 o'clock and so we called him on the phone and he came back down and got there around 11:15 or 11:30.
Mr. Ball. And it was about 12:10 when you ran the polygraph on Frazier, wasn't it?
Mr. Stovall. No, sir; it was about 12:10 when we finished, I think, when he finished running it.
Mr. Ball. About 12:10 when you finished the polygraph on Frazier?