Mr. Griffin. This will be sent all around the country. All the libraries in the major cities will certainly have them, but if you want a personal copy, why we can have one made up.

Mr. Richey. The town I come from the people aren’t very broadminded.

Mrs. Richey. There is not very many Richeys around.

Mr. Griffin. There will be volumes and volumes of this testimony. I might ask your husband just one question. You are here and you are not under oath and you aren’t obliged to answer it, but since you are here I will ask you if there is anything that you would like to contribute as a result of having heard this deposition?

Mr. Richey. As you could gather, I knew Jack Ruby myself.

Mr. Griffin. Yes.

Mr. Richey. I spoke with him the night before I left for home, which is the night before President Kennedy was killed, and he seemed normal.

Mr. Griffin. Where did you see him?

Mr. Richey. At the club. I was sitting there at the club waiting for Margie to finish work. He come up, sat alongside me, asked what I thought of the job. And to me of course in my own opinion he was always off somewhere in his mind. He asked me a question but he didn’t listen to my answer. He was thinking of something else completely, which is just talking. This is the impression the man gave me in the first place.

Mr. Griffin. How long were you at the club Thursday night?