Mr. Hubert. You recognized him?

Mr. Vaughn. Yes.

Mr. Hubert. And you let him out?

Mr. Vaughn. No, he didn't go out. He just come up and helped me at top of the ramp.

Mr. Hubert. Did he give you any instructions or orders?

Mr. Vaughn. No. I asked him, I said, "What happened?" And he said, "He's been shot."

I said, "Who shot him?" And he said—well, he understood it was a reporter and that was all that was said then, and then immediately after that Captain Talbert, Capt. C. E. Talbert come up the ramp and he told me that if anybody tried to leave to get their names and what they had seen in the basement, and he went back down the ramp and shortly thereafter there was a sergeant, I believe, it was Sergeant Everett—I'm not real positive about that, but he brought me a book to write anybody's name on that did try to leave.

Mr. Hubert. Did anybody try to leave?

Mr. Vaughn. Yes, one man—it was quite some time after the shooting occurred—after this, one man tried to leave and he was a reporter up here with WFAA—Dallas Morning News by the name of Millican. I asked him his name. He wrote his name down and I asked him what he had seen. He said he didn't see anything, that he didn't arrive until actually after the shooting happened.

Mr. Hubert. How did he identify himself?