Mr. Griffin. Would it have been downstairs or upstairs?
Mr. Knight. No; that would have been with everybody around there.
Mr. Griffin. I haven’t any more questions and I will just throw in one general one. Is there anything else that you can think of we haven’t covered that you think we ought to know?
Mr. Knight. No. I’m trying to go back in my mind, too, and think of the insanity thing. I don’t think I mentioned before, that is, Oswald’s sanity, and the Heroism thing. And I can’t think of anything that would be significant except my own again speculation about the whole thing which I am sure you don’t want to hear.
Mr. Griffin. I think we have probably speculated on everything that could be based on facts here. You have speculated some and it’s been helpful. Of course, we are interested in speculations only to the extent that they might suggest some facts.
Mr. Knight. One big speculation that I told you, who could have given Ruby the speech of Heroism. That’s it. How could he, where did he obtain a copy. And again, well, go ahead.
Mr. Griffin. I don’t know if it’s reassuring to you, but we speculated about this, too, and we made an effort to find out.
Mr. Knight. In the trial that Ruby just sort of said, “This is it, we have had it,” it was just a very fast job and ended the trial like they just wanted to get him in there and convict him.
Mr. Griffin. You mean the defense was conducted that way or that the prosecution——
Mr. Knight. No; the prosecution—don’t use the word railroad. Strike that out.