Mr. Griffin. Would you state for the record when it was that you and I talked?
Mr. Graves. Oh, approximately 30 minutes ago.
Mr. Griffin. We have been talking almost continuously since that?
Mr. Graves. Yes.
Mr. Griffin. All right, now, I will indicate for the record that we have been discussing the—your experiences from the time President Kennedy was shot until you arrived for work on Sunday morning, November 24, and I believe you told me while I was interviewing you that on Sunday morning you drove to work, and that you parked your car somewhere along the side of the police department building, and it is your recollection that you walked from the Commerce Street side through the basement hall that leads to the records room?
Mr. Graves. Yes.
Mr. Griffin. Now, I asked you in the interview whether you remember just—remembered just as you walked down from the Commerce Street—down the steps to the door which leads into the building, whether as you got inside the building you noticed the placement of TV cables in relationship to the engineroom, or that door that goes back down into the subbasement. Do you have any recollection of how the TV cables were spread out there?
Mr. Graves. Vaguely. I think the cables did go through that door. I couldn’t be sure.
Mr. Griffin. Which door are you talking about?
Mr. Graves. Through the engineroom door.