Mr. Griffin. And that is why I ask you again if it is not possible—now this interview was not under the same kind of pressure?

Mr. Senator. No; that is right. You are right on that. All I can say is maybe it is just a thing that slipped my mind.

Mr. Griffin. Or is it possible that in fact all you remembered was that Jack had said that he bought food for Eva, and that he hadn’t mentioned anything about going to the police station?

Mr. Senator. No; this is the same time when he bought all this stuff, when he bought these bags. Mind you, when I mentioned about these bags, this is the first time that I have even thought about this to anybody that I spoke to, see.

Mr. Griffin. Now keep in mind the distinction between what Jack——

Mr. Senator. Even though this thing slipped my mind all the way through completely.

Mr. Griffin. Yes; but try to focus on this distinction, the difference between what Jack told you on Friday night or Saturday morning, and what you later learned some time afterward. I ask you if it isn’t possible that you learned about Jack’s going to the police station after you talked with Agent Moore, and that that is the reason that you didn’t tell this to the police and you didn’t tell it to the FBI and you didn’t tell it to Agent Moore, because you knew about the sandwiches when you talked with Moore, and when you talked with the FBI, and you knew about going to Eva’s, but at that point you didn’t know of any connection between the sandwiches and the police station.

Mr. Senator. The only way that I can really express this, it could be a probability and then it couldn’t, in other words, I can’t answer the question truthfully and be sure. I say I am not sure. What else could I say on that?

Mr. Griffin. All right, this is what we are trying to get at.

Mr. Senator. I still ain’t sure if I did or didn’t mind you.