Mr. Griffin. What was brought to your attention—what particular facts?
Mr. Ruby. Well, the fact it seemed that Jack in digging down into his past, he had an obsession about the Jewish people, and he always went out of his way to show people that Jews are not bad people, you know, because you know they have been persecuted over the years, and that is one of the reasons he brought the policemen at the station sandwiches and went out of his way to bring them cheesecakes and he was in debt to me for thousands of dollars, yet he never sent me any money but he always had money to give more or less or lend to these other people, almost all non-Jews to show them that a Jew would help them out.
A policeman became a father and was short on money, he would lend him a couple of hundred, never got it back, never got anything back.
Another friend he ran into needed a car to get a job—lent him a few hundred.
Mr. Griffin. Do you know—can you give us the names of some of these people?
Mr. Ruby. No; but my sister has them down there. I don’t have it. But I know of these instances, and he read all these books on the Jewish problem, the persecution of the Jews, going all the way back.
Mr. Griffin. How do you know that?
Mr. Ruby. I know from my sister. He lived with my sister and she told me, and he told me—both.
Mr. Griffin. Is this Eva?
Mr. Ruby. Eva; yes.