Dr. Bieberdorf. Yes; that’s correct.
Mr. Hubert. What time did you go on duty that day?
Dr. Bieberdorf. I arrived down there about 9:30 in the morning.
Mr. Hubert. Now, Doctor, I have shown you, and I believe you have read what purports to be a report of an interview of you by FBI Agents Mabey and Hughes on December 5, 1963, which I am now marking for identification on the first page by writing as follows: “Dallas, Tex., March 31, 1964. Exhibit 5123, Deposition of Dr. Fred Bieberdorf.” I am signing my own name on the first page; on the second page I am placing my initials in the lower right-hand corner, the same with the third and the same with the fourth and last. In order that the record may show that we are both talking about the same document, I ask you please to sign your name under my signature, or by it, and place your initials also on the subsequent pages. Now, Doctor, addressing ourselves to the exhibit marked now for identification as 5123, I ask you if you have read it?
Dr. Bieberdorf. I have read it.
Mr. Hubert. Is it correct and true?
Dr. Bieberdorf. In the main, it is. There are a few corrections in it and additions that I would like to make.
Mr. Hubert. Very well. Suppose that we do it this way. If you can identify by page, paragraph and sentence that part which you need to have modified by reading in quotes, as it were, stating then for the record, “quote, unquote,” and then make the comment. I think that the record will be better in that way.
Dr. Bieberdorf. Okay. First of all, throughout this document my last name is misspelled.
Mr. Hubert. Well, let’s see. To get that straight, your last name is [spelling] B-i-e-b-e-r-d-o-r-f?