Mr. Adamcik. I would say that it didn't take us over, it probably took us half an hour to get there. I would say it would be approximately 3 o'clock.
Mr. Belin. What did you do when you got there?
Mr. Adamcik. We waited a few minutes for the county officers to get there, and when they got there we came outside, and I went with one of the county officers or two of the county officers to the back door, and one of the county officers and Detectives Rose and Stovall went to the front door.
Mr. Belin. Then what did you do?
Mr. Adamcik. We waited until Detectives Rose and Stovall and the county officers got inside the house, which was a period of time of maybe 3 or 4 minutes when they were invited in, and they came to the back door and opened it up and asked us to come in.
Mr. Belin. Who asked you to come in?
Mr. Adamcik. Detectives Rose and Stovall, plus—because Mrs. Paine was in the house at the time standing next to them.
Mr. Belin. Then what did you do?
Mr. Adamcik. Well, we started looking around the house. I think Detectives Rose and Stovall handled most of the interrogation. They asked the questions of Mrs. Paine, and Mrs. Oswald, after we found out who they were—and I didn't do any interrogating at the time at all, I just sort of stood and listened, and we started looking around.
We asked them where Mr. Oswald was, and various things, and we looked around.