Mr. Hubert. You observed those conditions prior to the time you left?
Mr. Crafard. Yes.
Mr. Hubert. This nervous condition?
Mr. Crafard. Yes; on the night when we went out and took those pictures he was pretty well that way, he would talk in a burst and he would stop and then talk in a burst again.
Mr. Hubert. Now, Larry, isn’t it a fact that the reason why you left was because you didn’t want to have any part of what you saw going on then?
Mr. Crafard. I don’t understand what you mean by that.
Mr. Hubert. You saw Jack being nervous. You saw him taking all these pictures. You saw his great concern about the death of the President. Didn’t it occur to you, and isn’t it a fact that the reason you had left was because you figured that you didn’t want to have any part of anything that was going on, although you didn’t know what was going on? Isn’t that a fact?
Mr. Crafard. No. I cannot say that it is, because I had no idea there was anything going on, period.
Mr. Griffin. Was there anything about Jack that indicated to you a peculiar concern about the death of the President, that the death of the President itself was some sort of a concern, a great concern to him more than it seemed to be to you or to Andy or anybody else?
Mr. Crafard. It seemed to me more like it was more of a personal effect on him than it did on anybody else that I talked to very much.