Mr. Griffin. Do you think there is anything, can you think of anything as a result of what you saw down there in Dallas that would indicate that Jack shot Oswald out of some kind of fear?
Mr. Crafard. No; I can’t really think of anything.
Mr. Griffin. Out of some motive of self-preservation other than, or not necessarily connected with the shooting of the President, but that he would have feared Oswald in any kind of a way?
Mr. Crafard. No; I can’t think of anything that would prove that, that would give me any reason to believe that.
Mr. Griffin. Do you have some idea on the basis of your experience with Jack and so forth as to why he shot Oswald?
Mr. Crafard. No; I haven’t, other than the fact that I believed ever since it happened that Jack was out of his mind. I believe right today that the man should be in a mental institution.
Mr. Griffin. Is that simply because you can’t conceive of anybody doing what he did, or from some other facts?
Mr. Crafard. I can’t conceive of a man that is in his right mind walking up to a man, just walking up to a man, putting a gun in his belly and pulling the trigger.
Mr. Griffin. In a police station?
Mr. Crafard. That is right, I can’t conceive of it, of any man that is in his right mind doing so.