Mr. Hubert. That is the Commerce——
Sergeant Steele. The municipal building. The nearest door to the municipal building.
Mr. Hubert. Did you place any on the Main Street door to the municipal building?
Sergeant Steele. No, sir; I never got to the Main Street.
Mr. Hubert. Did you place any officers to direct traffic at the intersection of Main and Pearl, or to control traffic?
Sergeant Steele. Well, we started—can I go on?
Mr. Hubert. Yes; surely.
Sergeant Steele. Well, we'll get to that. After I got these reserve people put out, as I say, I got down—went down in the basement and talked to the captain for a few minutes. And I stood around and things were kind of at a standstill there. There was lots of television and camera people in there, and about 10:30, I guess, the captain told Sergeant Dean, who related to myself and Sergeant Putnam that they would bring this armored car in and the armored car was going to go down Main Street to the county jail, and he said to get all the regular patrol officers, all the regular officers and assign them to traffic intersections, traffic corners.
Sergeant Steele. On Main Street, and I just helped Sergeant Dean make the assignments. I don't recall whether I specifically assigned a man to Main and Pearl, but then the captain came along a few minutes later and said it had been changed, that we were going to run the armored car down Elm Street, so, whatever men we may have assigned to Main and Pearl, that is where he would have been, and he was taken off the assignment. They never went to it.