Mr. Smart. To the right. The paper bags were more in the back. He had two or three boxes of pictures of girls, and things like that, that we just thumbed through, maybe stacks of them that high, a lot of cards to his club. That was mostly what the stuff was in the trunk.
Mr. Griffin. Now, if these keys were placed where you found them and one had been driving that car, would the motion—were they placed in such a way that the motion of the car or bumps and whatnot would move these about?
Mr. Smart. I would think they would probably have scooted under papers or something, would have been my guess, possibly.
Mr. Griffin. Now, is there anything that you saw or that you have learned that would indicate to you how long those keys might have been in the back of that trunk prior to the time that you opened it?
Mr. Smart. You want my thought?
Mr. Griffin. Yes; I do.
Mr. Smart. My thought, when I found things like they were, that Jack Ruby had purposely put his billfold in the glove compartment and purposely put his keys in the trunk compartment and locked it up and purposely left his trunk key in the glove compartment so he could get to it. That was my thought. I wondered why he left his billfold with all of his identification in it in his glove compartment.
Mr. Griffin. I would like to have your opinion as a trained investigator, anything else that led you to believe this or why, other than simply the placement that we have just discussed, that would have led you to think that he had done what you mentioned?
Mr. Smart. Because, when he left the car on the lot, there was no attendant there, I guess was the main reason. He parked it in an odd place and up on an incline deal on the lot.
Mr. Griffin. How was it an odd place?