Mr. Griffin. How long have you been employed with the Dallas Morning News?
Mr. Beers. A little over 14 years.
Mr. Griffin. I take it you have been a photographer?
Mr. Beers. Since 1942; yes, sir.
Mr. Griffin. Now I want to hand you a document which I have marked Dallas, Tex., April 14, 1963, Ira J. Beers’ Exhibit 5350. This purports to be a copy of an FBI interview report. The interview took place, according to this report, on November 30, 1963, between you and two Special Agents of the FBI, Mr. Pinkston and W. Harlan Brown. I want to hand you this and ask you if you have had a chance to read it?
Mr. Beers. Yes, sir.
Mr. Griffin. Do you have any additions or corrections that you would want to make in that. What I am referring to here right now in particular is whether you feel that that report accurately reflects everything that you told the bureau on the date of that interview?
Mr. Beers. With one minor exception. Shall I just read?
Mr. Griffin. Would you read the sentence that you feel is wrong?
Mr. Beers. “He is acquainted with Ruby both by name and by sight since about 18 months ago. He was assigned as a cameraman with Dale Bayse, a reporter for the Dallas News, on a story Bayse was doing on a stripper school being run by Jack Ruby.