Mr. Ruby. Yes. There wasn’t no money or anything in the deal. Ray Brantley said, “Oh, I know McWillie. I’ve done business with him constantly.” Following that—I never followed up on it a time, and what he did—and this is incriminating against me very bad, but he had the irony to do this—when I mentioned the fact that I did call Ray Brantley, this man denied that I called him. That makes me a liar to that extent, so I want that question put to me in reference to Ray Brantley and all that and I want about my trip to Cuba and my association with the underworld.
Mr. Specter. Well, the question of the gun with Ray Brantley was covered in detail when the Chief Justice was here and we shall cover that in the balance of the polygraph examination.
Mr. Ruby. I also had numerous phone calls, long-distance calls, all over the country and that was with relationship only to my nightclub that I had trouble with the union. There was no conspiracy, but you’ll go into that.
Mr. Specter. You covered that also in your testimony before the Commission.
Mr. Ruby. Yes; but that doesn’t prove anything.
Mr. Alexander. Let me suggest one question there to ask him?
Mr. Specter. Yes, sir.
Mr. Alexander. “Did any telephone call you made have any connection, however remote, with your shooting of Oswald?”
Mr. Ruby. No.
Mr. Alexander. That will cover it.