Mrs. Grant. Oh, no.
Mr. Hubert. Or, was it a long distance call?
Mrs. Grant. No; it was a local call.
Mr. Hubert. Was it a man or a woman?
Mrs. Grant. A man, and another thing, I know my phone was tapped and I know—it’s a terrible thing to say, but I have all reasons to believe that the district attorney has been on it and is still on it. The only time they got off is when I went to the FBI and complained about it; that I thought my brother wasn’t protected in the city jail, and somebody knows every move I was making. It seems my phone was clearer after that, and truthfully, if the district attorney has any tapes on me, it should be in on the tape of the day of the verdict, and I was so sick over the verdict and having this.
Mr. Hubert. You did not recognize the voice that made the threat against Belli?
Mrs. Grant. No.
Mr. Hubert. Were you asked to convey that information to Belli?
Mrs. Grant. No; no.
Mr. Hubert. How long did that conversation last; do you know?