Mr. Hubert. On both occasions?

Mr. Walker. Yes; and I am not sure, I probably told him “I don’t know.” It says here that I said, “No.” But I have no way of knowing yes or no, really, which is true. We had cameras, and I could see what the cameramen were doing, but I still really have no way of knowing.

Mr. Hubert. Perhaps you’d better describe for the record what you meant by mug shots?

Mr. Walker. Well, as I understand it, from listening on the intercom, we were told we were going to get pictures of Jack Ruby and that we would have to get them right away because our people did not have the pictures and would not be allowed to have them, and I assumed that someone from the police department would be holding those pictures, because they—we were told to get the tapes to rolling, because we wouldn’t get a second shot at him. And it would just be, get them or miss them, and I presume that someone in the police department was holding those pictures.

Mr. Hubert. In front of a camera inside the jail?

Mr. Walker. Yes, sir.

Mr. Hubert. It was that mug shot that you remembered talking about that immediately brought to your mind “this is the man I saw just before the shooting of Oswald, or sometime before the shooting”?

Mr. Walker. Yes.

Mr. Hubert. Now have you been interviewed by any member of the President’s Commission before this date, sir?

Mr. Walker. No; only there were some FBI men came to the station, and I believe they are the men you mentioned here.