Mr. Ryder. Yes.

Mr. Liebeler. You say you boiled this down in your conversation with Horton from the FBI?

Mr. Ryder. Actually, this was amongst ourselves, I and Mr. Greener. Actually, there was a lady from the Washington press, of course, I don't know, I forgotten which paper she worked with but she was with the Washington press and we discussed this with her quite thoroughly.

Mr. Liebeler. Do you remember her name?

Mr. Ryder. I sure don't. She, in turn, called Klein's and found out the rifle that was used in the assassination had already been drilled and tapped. In other words, he had bought the scope and rifle from Klein's and they were shipped together and all he had to do was attach it to this particular gun. In other words, the one he used in the assassination. Of course, they order by serial number.

Mr. Liebeler. You also testified you did not mount any scope on an Italian rifle?

Mr. Ryder. Right.

Mr. Liebeler. You say, that when you mount a scope you do not charge for the process of boresighting, is that correct?

Mr. Ryder. Actually, it's hard to say, really. At that time we were not charging if we drilled and tapped one, we didn't do it. Now we do charge extra, $1.50 bore sighting.

Mr. Liebeler. Do you recall if there was an extra $1.50 for boresighting indicated on the ticket in question?