Mr. Liebeler. But you never saw him drive a car?
Mr. Gregory. No. He would walk great distances without thinking about it. I mean, what is in our estimation a great distance. And then he rode the bus quite a bit. But I never saw him drive a car or heard of him driving a car.
Mr. Liebeler. Were you surprised when you learned that Oswald had been arrested in connection with the assassination?
Mr. Gregory. Very.
Mr. Liebeler. Would you tell us something about your state of mind at that time?
Mr. Gregory. Well, my first impression was, I saw him on television when they first brought him in, and they didn't mention his name. And later they said the first suspect being brought in is Lee Oswald. I felt sure he had not done it. I felt that they probably brought him in because of his record in the Soviet Union and thought maybe he would be a likely person, but I did not think he had done it.
The only time I decided he may have done it was when the Secret Service talked to me and said the evidence looked——
Mr. Liebeler. Talked to you?
Mr. Gregory. Yes; it was on a Saturday after the assassination, and said it looked like he was the one. And my—I more or less reoriented my thinking that he was the one.
Mr. Liebeler. Who from the Secret Service talked to you; do you remember?