Mr. Liebeler. Now I show you two pictures that have been marked Exhibits Nos. 3 and 4 on Mr. Greener's deposition. They are pictures of a rifle, and I ask you if you have ever seen a rifle like that or ever worked on one here in your shop?
Mr. Ryder. I have seen them but never have worked on one of them.
Mr. Liebeler. Had you seen them before the assassination?
Mr. Ryder. This is what I was talking about the other day. This is not as plain a picture as Mr. Horton had. Evidently that is a reprint, but there are two screws, one here and one here, where on the tag I have charged for three holes.
Mr. Liebeler. You are indicating the screws on Exhibit No. 3, that hold the scope mount to the rifle; is that correct?
Mr. Ryder. Mr. Horton, the FBI man, on the rifle he had it was real plain and you could see these two screws, and this was a hole, but there wasn't any screws. There was just two screws in the mount.
Mr. Liebeler. The mount had three holes but only two screws?
Mr. Ryder. That is apparently in the picture you have here, and this is what I was referring to as a cheap mount. This looked to me like even in this picture it was real thin gage metal. I can show you something like that, that we use on a .22 scope, and that is all we use.
Mr. Liebeler. But in your opinion it is too light a mount?
Mr. Ryder. Yes; it is too easy to get jarred off on a high-powered rifle.