Mr. Hubert. Of what?
Mrs. Rich. Vag—vagrancy. Narcotics, prostitution, and anything else they could dream up. This is very shortly after I had threatened to go and bring suit against Mr. Ruby. I was told I might find the climate outside of Dallas a little more to my liking if I didn’t take the advice of the police department.
Mr. Hubert. Who told you that?
Mrs. Rich. The time I went down and wanted to bring charges against Ruby for assault and battery, I was told not to, and at that time I was also advised—I was not told to leave the city or anything like that, but that it was nice in Chicago, for instance, that time of year.
Mr. Hubert. And I think you said that you did not remember the name of the man.
Mrs. Rich. I cannot remember the name of the detective that I spoke to; no.
Mr. Hubert. But he was the detective on the police force?
Mrs. Rich. He was. Jack Ruby is very well known in Dallas. A little too well known.
Mr. Hubert. What do you mean by that?
Mrs. Rich. Just a personal opinion. I believe—now, this is not a fact, this is just talk, this is just personal opinion—I believe at the time of the—am I naming it correctly—Oswald assassination, it was claimed that Ruby got in there pretending to be a reporter. Am I correct that that was in the printed page?