Mr. Dean. Yes, sir. He was a regular there all the time that I worked there, or worked in that area.

Mr. Griffin. Who else did you recognize at the trial whom you remember from the Carousel Club?

Mr. Dean. I don't believe I recognized anyone, other than this fellow George Senator.

Mr. Griffin. Was there a Negro man named Andy Armstrong that testified at the trial?

Mr. Dean. I don't know. I don't know Andy Armstrong.

Mr. Griffin. He is one of Ruby's workers there.

Okay. Anything else in there that [indicating]——

Mr. Dean. Well, I would like for the record to show that my visits while off duty to the Carousel was definitely an exception rather than rule, and it would usually be when out-of-town people would come to town, and this, by my working in that area, had gone in there frequently on duty, I knew—or there had never been any trouble in there, to my knowledge, as far as fights and such as that. I knew it was a safe place for an off-duty officer to go, and interesting to someone that hadn't seen it. So this is the exception that I went there. I recall now, by reading this investigation by the FBI, that soon after I had left the basement after this shooting, or left the immediate area where Oswald was laying, I do recall now asking R. C. Nelson, that was stationed at that doorway, had he come in that way, and he then stated he was positive he hadn't. This was reflected in this—I do remember. I wanted it to show that I do remember now, after reading that.

Mr. Griffin. Now, let me stop you here, Sergeant.

Mr. Dean. All right.