Mrs. Tice. Yes.
Mr. Griffin. Has this disturbed you, his objection to that?
Mrs. Tice. Yes: it disturbs me all the time, because he doesn’t want me to go out of the house while he is gone, because he says my place is in the house.
Mr. Griffin. If you were really sure that the man you saw out there was Jack Ruby, wouldn’t you have reported it to the police or the FBI within a few days, or called them on the telephone, or something like that and told them about it very shortly after Jack shot Oswald?
Mrs. Tice. No; because I thought they knew everything. I didn’t know that Eva and them didn’t know he went out there, or I wouldn’t have said that to her.
Mr. Griffin. You assumed that when you said that, that they knew?
Mrs. Tice. That they knew he was out there.
Mr. Griffin. That they thought he was out there?
Mrs. Tice. I assumed they knew he was out there.
Mr. Griffin. Had you read the article that one of the newspaper reporters wrote who also said he saw Jack Ruby out at the Parkland Hospital.