Mr. Liebeler. Let me show you another picture, Mr. Slack, that has been previously marked as Pizzo's 453-C, and ask you if that looks like the fellow you saw at the rifle range?

Mr. Slack. That is him. I would know that baby face and that chin, and he had a—I remember people, but no names.

Mr. Liebeler. What about the hair?

Mr. Slack. That is the man I saw at the rifle range.

Mr. Liebeler. You are sure about that?

Mr. Slack. I know it is. In other words, just like if I saw you tomorrow. Because his eyes were deep like a man that was, that wears highly magnified glasses and then doesn't have his glasses on. And he had that deep—that is the man we saw out there. That is the man. And I would remember him 20 years from now, just over that one incident.

Mr. Liebeler. Have you seen that guy's picture in the paper?

Mr. Slack. But he don't have a good—he didn't have a very good likeness of him, like the paper pictures. That was him as I saw him at the rifle range, and as I saw him I second before. No, one-tenth of a second before he was shot. That is the time.

Mr. Liebeler. You mean on television?

Mr. Slack. On television. And I saw when they were transferring him even before that. And I told Lucille, I told my wife, wait a minute, I've got to see the side of his face.