Mr. Hubert. Now, since all this happened you must have stopped to think to yourself, “Well, did that man come in through where I was supposed to be?”
Mr. McKinzie. Oh, yes, sir. I have thought of it, but I know he didn’t.
Mr. Hubert. That is what I want to find out. You have put your mind to it and you have thought about it a great deal——
Mr. McKinzie. Yes, sir.
Mr. Hubert. And you are prepared to tell us under oath now, Louis, that this man did not come through, so far as you know, you didn’t see him?
Mr. McKinzie. That’s right. That’s right. He come in there some other way. He didn’t come through that elevator.
Mr. Hubert. Have you anything else you want to say, Louis, that might help the President’s Commission in finding out the truth about this thing?
Mr. McKinzie. Well, I don’t—other words about it, I just don’t know anything I could say.
Mr. Hubert. Well, we certainly don’t want you to invent anything. On the other hand, we want you to feel free to say anything that is the truth.
Mr. McKinzie. Yes, sir; that’s right.