Mr. McMillon. What we had been doing, facts about it, instructed us not to talk to any other man about it, that he wanted each man’s own report, which I wrote my own report. After I had written my report and turned it in, there has been a lot of conversation about it. I have discussed it with numerous people.
Mr. Griffin. Did anybody from the homicide bureau question you about the statement that Ruby made?
Mr. McMillon. May have been, but I don’t remember when. Something about I was supposed to sign an affidavit to them or something, but I don’t believe I ever signed any affidavit to them, some fact that I was——
Mr. Griffin. How soon after you heard this statement from Ruby were you questioned by homicide detectives concerning that statement?
Mr. McMillon. I don’t think I was ever to the point where we could say questioned by them. It seems to me like one of them asked me in the hall, “Did you hear him say so and so, did you hear this, that and the other, could you testify to this, that and the other, did you hear it?” It came up in a couple of days, but, as far as I know, I didn’t sign an affidavit.
Mr. Griffin. Did you testify at the trial?
Mr. McMillon. Yes.
Mr. Griffin. Did you testify about having heard this statement?
Mr. McMillon. How he entered the basement?
Mr. Griffin. Yes.