Mrs. Oswald. If there was a hole, I would have asked them right away why that hole is there or the black spot.
Mr. McKenzie. Off the record, please.
(Discussion between Mr. McKenzie and Mr. Liebeler to the effect that the picture might have been creased in the process of making a print from the original photograph.)
Mr. McKenzie. One more question—is this the first time that you have seen the picture when there was a black spot in the back of the automobile?
*Mrs. Oswald. Yes; the first time.
Mr. Liebeler. Have you ever seen a picture like this that had a hole in it?
*Mrs. Oswald. No.
Mr. Liebeler. Do you think of anything else about this Walker incident that you haven't already told the Commission that you think we should know that you can remember?
Mrs. Oswald. I think I have told all I know about it—I can't remember anything else now.
Mr. Liebeler. Did it seem strange to you at the time, Marina, that Lee did make these careful plans, take pictures, and write it up in a notebook, and then when he went out to shoot at General Walker he left all that incriminating evidence right in the house so that if he had ever been stopped and questioned and if that notebook had been found, it would have clearly indicated that he was the one that shot at General Walker?