Mr. Hubert. Now, let’s go through that again, because it is very important and I want to get it for sure. That door operates only with a key, that is to say, from the inside. You can’t just use the door without a key from the inside?
Mr. Servance. Let’s put it this way. Once you lock the door you have to have a key to unlock it. Now, see, you shut that door, it catches, but it is not locked. See what I mean? But in order for that door to be locked we have to put a key in there and turn that lock and let that come out and go into that socket, you see?
Mr. Hubert. So, a man who is going through those doors leading from the municipal building to the alleyway uses the key to open the door to get out into the alleyway. Now, when he leaves and goes down the alleyway and has taken these keys with him, is that door then open so that somebody can come in without a key or do you need a key to get back in again?
Mr. Servance. Well, now, if—usually, if the fellow’s got the key, he usually locks it when he goes out.
Mr. Hubert. Now, if he locks it back when he got—when he goes out but he didn’t lock it again——
Mr. Servance. You don’t need no key.
Mr. Hubert. The door is open?
Mr. Servance. You don’t need a key.
Mr. Hubert. Do you know from your own knowledge whether Riggs and Fuqua went through that alley door that morning?
Mr. Servance. I couldn’t say. I mean, I don’t—I mean I don’t recall that. There is a possibility that they could have, but I don’t recall it.