Mr. Hubert. So that your observation of this man coming up to the truck a couple of times was independent of that of Walker, and it had not been communicated between you?
Mr. Smith. That’s correct.
Mr. Hubert. Did you communicate your association between the mug shot of Jack Ruby and the man you had seen, to Mr. Warren Richey?
Mr. Smith. Not at this time. Several days later we discussed it, and we seemed to be of the same opinion at that time.
Mr. Hubert. You have never seen Ruby in person since?
Mr. Smith. No, sir. Let me say this. The person that I am talking about is, I hate to say, dirty, an unkempt person that possibly could have slept with his clothes on, you see. He would be the opposite of what we see in these photographs of a well-dressed, natty person with stylish clothes. I am talking about the opposite type of person from that.
Mr. Hubert. Now let me ask you this. Aside from your association of the man on the street and the mug shot of Ruby, have you in your mind compared your recollection of the man on the street with other photographs that you have seen of Ruby?
Mr. Smith. No. I have never seen a photograph of Ruby that gives me that same picture; you know what I mean.
Mr. Hubert. Well, the answer is really that you have made the comparison, but that you cannot feel as sure that the man on the street was the Jack Ruby that you saw in subsequent pictures?
Mr. Smith. Yes.