Mr. Tonahill. Yes, that’s a very good question.

Mr. Herndon. All right, Mr. Ruby, will this question create any problem for you? “Were you on the sidewalk at the time Lieutenant Pierce’s car”—I had “drove out,” but was he driving out or was he parked there?

Mr. Ruby. When I noticed him he was already—he was stationary. He was parked. He had stalled there or something.

Mr. Specter. “Were you on the sidewalk at the time Lieutenant Pierce’s car stopped in front of the guard at the exit?”

Mr. Ruby. Yes, yes. Why do you say “stopped at the exit?”

Mr. Tonahill. At the ramp exit.

Mr. Herndon. “The ramp exit”—that makes it specific.

Mr. Ruby, your question will then be, “Were you on the sidewalk at the time Lieutenant Pierce’s car stopped on the ramp exit?”

Mr. Ruby. Yes.

Mr. Herndon. Or, would you prefer “at the ramp exit?”