Mr. Hubert. So that in effect he was telling you that he was the one who was to have the sexual relationships with the girls and not anyone else?
Mr. Crafard. That is about the effect of it.
Mr. Hubert. Did he say it as clearly as that?
Mr. Crafard. No; he didn’t say it in so many words, but just an implied statement.
Mr. Hubert. That is the meaning you got out of that colloquy, is that right?
Mr. Crafard. Yes, sir.
Mr. Griffin. Can you tell us as best you can remember what the conversation was?
Mr. Crafard. I don’t know. I said something about I would like to get ahold of that or something, and Jack said, he said, he had already gotten into it or something like that, and something said about his girls, and I said so far as I am concerned—at that time it was a little later after I went to work for him—I said, “As far as I am concerned you haven’t got a stripper I am interested in,” and he said, “I have had a relationship with every one of them.”
Mr. Griffin. Did you think Jack was puffing on that or did you believe him?
Mr. Crafard. I don’t know. As far as the strippers went I can very well believe that but the waitresses it was pretty hard to believe because little Marge, she ended up marrying a guy, and she was pretty stiff on him, and in fact, so much that I have tried everything I could to get her even to go out with me and she wouldn’t do it. And the other girls didn’t seem too much to me like the type that would do so.