Mr. Burleson. What is his greatest desire as you know it right now?

Mrs. Grant. He wants to tell the Warren Commission the truth—he wants truth serum and a lie detector test.

Mr. Burleson. The truth being not going into the psychomotor variant epilepsy.

Mrs. Grant. He don’t know much about that—he doesn’t even know what they are talking about.

Mr. Burleson. He just wants to tell how he felt and how these things affected him?

Mrs. Grant. That’s right.

Mr. Burleson. I believe that’s all on those.

Mrs. Grant. All right.

Mr. Hubert. When he tells you these various things, do you try to straighten him out and say to him that it is not so?

Mrs. Grant. When it first started—I didn’t realize this—I hadn’t said things—I said, “Don’t be crazy,” just words like that—“what are you talking crazy,” and then when we got to—this Dr. Beavers into the case and I talked to him and he read something of his report and, of course, my sister was here at that time. Every day he would say to her, “You’ll never see me again. Kiss me goodby through the glass.” You know, if it wasn’t so serious it would be funny in a way, because it don’t seem like him. It seems that if I agree with him it’s no good and I have tried—I realize Dr. Beavers said if you’d try agreeing with him then he says, “You don’t believe me, do you?” He says, “They are playing a game with you, don’t believe Phil, don’t believe him.” And I said, “What about the rabbi?” And he says, “The rabbi don’t listen to me.” And truthfully, every time the rabbi went up there he came down sick and disgusted with himself—he’s trying to knock some sense into Jack and it don’t work—it doesn’t register with the rabbi, you see.