Mr. Fehrenbach. No.
Mr. Griffin. But what makes you associate a meeting, a large meeting with Jack Ruby’s or Jack Rubenstein’s visit?
Mr. Fehrenbach. Well, Jack, Seymour, and Charlotte came in that day, and then there was during the day, I don’t know how many others had come in, and some of them like I say were from Ohio, some of them from Chicago, Indianapolis, Indiana, and various parts, all over, and there was so many people, I was—people I had never seen before. I wasn’t introduced to anybody in any way, shape, or form that day but there was certainly a lot of them running in and out. And it seemed like everybody had to come in and say hello to Sam. This is why I say apparently it must have been a large meeting.
Mr. Griffin. Well, do you know, where the meeting was held?
Mr. Fehrenbach. I assumed that it was held upstairs but I don’t know.
Mr. Griffin. But you don’t have any information as to where it was held?
Mr. Fehrenbach. No.
Mr. Griffin. Then you don’t have any information that there was a meeting on this occasion?
Mr. Fehrenbach. Outside of what they was talking about I mean when they came in, they said, why there was one fellow, what made me know the meeting was that night, they came in just as we was leaving, Jack Rubenstein and I was leaving, and Jack said something to him about what are you doing here and he said, well he says, I came to the meeting tonight, and this is why I know there was definitely a meeting that night.
Mr. Griffin. What makes you remember your eating with him, your being with Jack Rubenstein after so many years, what makes you remember your being with him on this particular occasion?