Mr. Jenner. With which you are familiar and wore yourself in the Marines except yours was colored green?
Mr. Pizzo. It was green—that's right.
Mr. Jenner. Mr. Davis, he has already related to us the effort he made when this incident came to his attention late in the day on the 22d of November of seeking to find Bogard's card on which he is alleged to have written Oswald's name on the reverse side and was to attempt to obtain a writeup sheet, which is what the salesmen normally write up with respect to a prospect, even to the extent of his climbing into the large refuse container in which all paper and waste paper baskets are thrown the following day, and he was not able to find either of those, though they made two examinations and emptied out the large container twice—you did it yourself?
Mr. Pizzo. I did it myself and once with the FBI. I believe it was the man from Louisiana—one of the FBI men.
Mr. Jenner. You were interviewed by Carter Hayden and Griffin on January 8, was it either one of those? On January 8, 1964?
Mr. Pizzo. I was interviewed by two pairs of FBI men—it was immediately after the assassination, which was probably Monday or Tuesday.
Mr. Jenner. The first time?
Mr. Pizzo. The first time; but it wasn't January 8.
Mr. Jenner. Was that the last one—the last interview—January 8?
Mr. Pizzo. This might have been the last one, although I remember two other men came in from Chicago—one was from Chicago—one—I believe there were three, no, I'm sorry, it was the same two twice and then another team.