Mr. Adamcik. Yes; there was. I was not the senior officer conducting the search. Probably Detective Rose, although I believe Detective Moore might have been previous, but since Detective Rose was there the previous day, he was spokesman for the group.
Mr. Belin. Did Stovall work more with you or with Rose?
Mr. Adamcik. With Rose.
Mr. Belin. I believe Mr. Ball is about to take the deposition of R. S. Stovall, and I think what we will do is give this inventory to Mr. Ball and let him introduce it in that deposition.
Mr. Adamcik. That first day I couldn't tell you anything because I was out of the house trying to take care of the kids.
Mr. Belin. Is there anything else you can think of, officer, that we haven't discussed here?
Mr. Adamcik. No. The only thing is, after we finished conducting the search and got back to the office, I remember the previous day we didn't take an affidavit from Michael Paine, so Detective Moore and myself went back to Irving—should be around 5 o'clock, and picked up Mr. Paine and brought him back to the office for somebody to take an affidavit from him.
Mr. Belin. Did he say anything, that you remember, when you were taking the affidavit, about the rifle or the blanket?
Mr. Adamcik. He did. I was present when he said it, and it is in the affidavit, about seeing the blanket in which the rifle was wrapped in, or he assumed it was the blanket in which the rifle was wrapped.
Mr. Belin. Did he know that it contained a rifle?