Mr. Guinyard.
Oswald.
Mr. Ball.
Where?
Mr. Guinyard.
Oak Cliff.
Mr. Ball.
Tell me a little more about it.
Mr. Guinyard.
In Oak Cliff and down in the courtroom.
Mr. Ball.
Where?
Mr. Guinyard.
Down in the examining room.
Mr. Ball.
When this man came down Patton Street toward Jefferson with his gun, you have mentioned he had a shirt on?
Mr. Guinyard.
Yes, sir.
Mr. Ball.
You described that shirt as a brown shirt?
Mr. Guinyard.
Yes.
Mr. Ball.
Does this look anything like the shirt?
Mr. Guinyard.
It looks just like it does.
Mr. Ball.
You saw that shirt before?
Mr. Guinyard.
Yes.
Mr. Ball.
Where?
Mr. Guinyard.
Down at the city hall.
Mr. Ball.
At the police station?
Mr. Guinyard.
Yes.
Mr. Ball.
And what did you tell them when they showed you this shirt?
Mr. Guinyard.
I told them that that's the shirt he had on.
Mr. Ball.
Now, the next exhibit here is Commission Exhibit No. 162; have you ever seen this before?
Mr. Guinyard.
That's the jacket.
Mr. Ball.
This is a gray jacket?
Mr. Guinyard.
Yes; that's the gray jacket.
Mr. Ball.
It has a zipper on it?
Mr. Guinyard.
Yes.
Mr. Ball.
You say that's the jacket?
Mr. Guinyard.
Yes; that he had on in Oak Cliff when he passed the lot.
Mr. Ball.
That the man with the pistol had on?
Mr. Guinyard.
Yes, sir.
Mr. Ball.
I have no further questions for you, Sam, and I thank you for coming down, and you can go home now.
Mr. Guinyard.
Thank you.
J. C. Day
Affidavit of Lt. J. C. Day
The following affidavit was executed by Lt. J. C. Day on May 7, 1964.
PRESIDENT'S COMMISSION
ON THE ASSASSINATION OF AFFIDAVIT
PRESIDENT JOHN F. KENNEDY
STATE OF TEXAS,
County of Dallas, ss :
Before me, Mary Rattan, a Notary Public in and for said County, State of Texas, on this day personally appeared Lt. J. C. Day, Dallas Police Department, who, after being by me duly sworn, on oath deposes and says:
When testifying before the President's Commission, I stated I did not remember who returned the two spent 6.5 hulls and envelope to my possession on the night of November 22, 1963. Since returning to Dallas Detective C. N. Dhority has called my attention to the fact he brought the three hulls in the envelope to me and asked me to check them again for fingerprints even though I had checked them when they were picked up on the sixth floor of the Texas School Book Depository about 1:20 p.m. November 22, 1963 by Detective R. M. Sims and myself and placed in a manila envelope. Since talking to Dhority I remember