Mr. Hubert. Now, how long was Ruby there altogether?
Mr. Bellocchio. Approximately 15 minutes.
Mr. Hubert. And he was not there twice, that is to say, to your knowledge while you were there, he was there once?
Mr. Bellocchio. To my knowledge he was only there once.
Mr. Hubert. And that was for 15 minutes?
Mr. Bellocchio. Fifteen or twenty minutes.
Mr. Hubert. And therefore, if the man who is in the door business whose name you don’t remember at the moment, if he says he saw you talking to Ruby, that it had to be 4 o’clock because he couldn’t have been there before 4 o’clock, then you are willing to amend your statement to show that it was 4 rather than 2?
Mr. Bellocchio. Yes.
Mr. Hubert. Now, I will introduce that statement. I have handed to you previously so that you might read it, a document which purports to be an interview of you by FBI Agent James S. Weir on December 5, 1963, which for the purpose of identification I have marked as follows: “Dallas, Texas, June 27, 1964, Exhibit No. 1, Deposition of Frank Bellocchio,” and have signed my name Leon D. Hubert, Jr., which I have marked in the right-hand margin of the first page, the document consisting of two pages, and on the second page I have placed my initials on the lower right-hand corner.
Now, you have read this document, I think, and I ask if, except for the element of time, this document is correct, and does it correctly reflect the interview you had with the FBI agent?