Mr. Liebeler. When you saw his picture in the newspaper and on television? Is that right?

Mr. Reynolds. Yes; unless you have somebody that looks an awful lot like him there.

Mr. Liebeler. I show you an exhibit that has been marked Pizzo Exhibit No. 453-C and ask you if that is the same man, in your opinion?

Mr. Reynolds. Yes.

Mr. Liebeler. You were in no way, if I understand it correctly then, properly identified as anyone who had told the authorities that this man that was going down the street was the same man as Lee Harvey Oswald, is that correct?

Mr. Reynolds. Well, yes and no. When it happened, and after I seen—and you probably know what I did—after I saw the man on the corner of Patton and Jefferson, I followed him up the street behind the service station and lost him. I went back there and looked up and down the alley and didn't see him, and looked through the cars and still didn't see him.

Then the police got there, and they took my name. While they were taking my name, some television camera got me, and I was on television, I am sure nationwide. Then some man that I worked with wanted to be big time, I guess, so he called some radio station and told them what I had done, and they recorded that and ran it over and over and over again over the radio station. And other than that, no.

Mr. Liebeler. Well, what was it that they said you had done? All you had done was try to follow this man and he got away from you?

Mr. Reynolds. And he got away.

Mr. Liebeler. Then you went back and you looked around for him around the car lot in the area and you weren't able to find him?