Mr. Belin. Do you remember finding a leather gun holster?

Mr. Turner. Yes, sir; there was a holster found.

Mr. Belin. Now, what did you do after that?

Mr. Turner. After we brought this stuff to the office?

Mr. Belin. Yes.

Mr. Turner. Well, by that time the phones and everything else were going wild. I answered phones around there for quite a while. I believe I did take an affidavit from a sister of the boy that worked with Oswald at the Texas School Book Depository, the boy that he rode to work with that morning.

Mr. Belin. What do you do when you take an affidavit, by the way? How do you go about doing it?

Mr. Turner. Well, I just take the—let them tell the story, and write it down in longhand, and get the secretary to type it up, and let them sign it in front of a notary.

Mr. Belin. Do you have an affidavit in front of you or your notes from this Linnie Mae Randle, this sister of the boy that drove him to work, or not?

Mr. Turner. No, sir.