Mr. Hubert. So, he put the call in?
Lieutenant Wiggins. Yes, sir; he called himself, then let me say this, that after they brought Ruby in, then I turned and came back out the door and after they had brought Ruby and Oswald, after they had gotten him in I checked by telephone myself.
Mr. Hubert. Who did you speak to then?
Lieutenant Wiggins. I called one of them in the dispatcher's office, but I don't remember who I checked with.
Mr. Hubert. Now, I am marking a document purporting to be a letter dated November 27, 1963, addressed to J. E. Curry, chief of police, apparently signed by you, by marking on the right-hand margin these words, "Dallas, Tex., March 24, 1964, and Exhibit 5074. Deposition of W. Wiggins." I am signing my name on the first page, and placing my initials on the lower right-hand corner of the second page. I am marking a four-page document purporting to be a report of an interview with you by special agents of the FBI, Chapoton and Smith, dated December 2, 1963, by writing in the right margin on the first page of that document the following: "Dallas, Tex., March 24, 1964. Exhibit 5075, deposition of W. Wiggins." I am signing my name and I am placing my initials on a second, third and fourth page of that document by putting those initials in the lower right-hand corner. I ask you to look at these two exhibits and tell me whether you have had an opportunity to read them?
Lieutenant Wiggins. Yes; I have.
Mr. Hubert. Do those documents represent what you know to be the truth?
Lieutenant Wiggins. Yes; there is an error on the third page.
Mr. Hubert. Of which one?
Lieutenant Wiggins. Of the document taken by the Federal Bureau of Investigation.