Mr. Griffin. And who wasn’t so upset about the killing of the President that he would be motivated by grief or something like that to do such a thing.

Mr. Crafard. That is right.

Mr. Griffin. So you didn’t see him crying or weeping or emotionally, terribly emotionally, upset about the President?

Mr. Crafard. No; I didn’t actually see him crying. His eyes were very red as if he had been crying the last time I saw him on Friday.

Mr. Griffin. Or is that Saturday morning?

Mr. Crafard. Friday. But then again it struck me so hard that when I finally realized that it really had happened, it struck me so hard, that I almost cried myself. I believe there was a lot of people throughout the country, men and women alike, that cried when they heard about it.

Mr. Griffin. But still other than that reaction which you saw on Jack, there seemed to be nothing about Jack that made him appear any more grief stricken than any of the rest of you?

Mr. Crafard. No.

Mr. Griffin. Was Jack the kind of a person who was given to concealing his emotions?

Mr. Crafard. Not so far as I know; no.