Mr. Griffin. Well, did she tell you?
Mrs. Kaminsky. I’m not positive.
Mr. Griffin. Did she tell you why she didn’t make this information known before January?
Mrs. Kaminsky. I believe she said—well, the first thing, she didn’t even want her husband to know anything about it, even when she called me. She asked me if I did call; to call before 1 o’clock, because her husband comes in from work then, 1 in the afternoon and she felt he wouldn’t want her to get involved. And I—I believe—I am not positive but she never dreamt that the verdict would be such, you know. She felt that a verdict like that was so——
Mr. Griffin. How old a woman did she appear to be?
Mrs. Kaminsky. I believe in her middle forties. I thought, when I spoke to her on the phone, that she was a little, old woman, you know. Her voice seemed very weak, and I thought she might be a woman in her seventies. I was very much surprised to see her.
Mr. Griffin. Was there anything about her which would indicate to you that she might not be reliable?
Mrs. Kaminsky. No; as a matter of fact, she told me that she had worked, or been in charge of the juvenile home down in Dallas for quite awhile, superintendent or something, some fairly high capacity.
So I thought that—I took this into consideration. I thought her a person of some responsibility and, as a matter of fact, I believe she adopted several of the children from there.
Mr. Griffin. She is married?