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TESTIMONY OF NELSON BENTON beginning at 15H456....
The testimony of Nelson Benton was taken on July 7, 1964, at 300 Oil
and Gas Bldg., 1100 Tulane Avenue, New Orleans, La., by Mr. Leon D. Hubert, Jr. assistant
counsel of the President's Commission.
Mr. HUBERT. This is the deposition of Mr. Nelson Benton, Do you have a
middle initial?
Mr. BENTON. Well, my first name is Joseph but I just use Nelson.
Mr. HUBERT. Mr. Benton, my name is Leon Hubert. I am a member of the
advisory staff of the general counsel of the President's Commission on the Assassination
of President Kennedy. Under the provisions of Executive Order 11130, dated November 29,
1963, the joint resolution of the Congress No. 137, and the rules of procedure adopted by
the Commission, and in conformance with that Executive order and that joint resolution, I
have been authoried to take this sworn deposition from you.
I state to you that the general nature of the Commission's inquiry is
to ascertain, evaluate, and report upon the facts relative to the assassination of
President Kennedy and the subsequent violent death of Lee Harvey Oswald. In particular to
you, Mr. Benton, the nature of the inquiry today is to determine what facts you know about
the death of Oswald and any other pertinent facts you may know about the general inquiry
and about Jack Ruby and his operations and associates as to his movements on the dates of
November 22 through November 24, 1963.
Now, Mr. Benton, normally a witness is given a 3-day written notice
before his deposition is taken, in accordance with the rules of the Commission governing
the procedure, but the rules also provide that a witness may waive any notice and have his
deposition taken, by request, at any time.
In the instant case, no letter has been written to you or no request to
appear, but as I understand it, you waive all notice and are willing to have your
deposition taken now, this morning?
Mr. BENTON. That is right.
Mr. HUBERT. All right. Now, will you be sworn, please?
(Nelson Benton, a witness called by the President's Commission on the
Assassination of President Kennedy, having been first duly sworn, was examined and
testified as follows:)
Mr. HUBERT. Will you state your full name, please?
Mr. BENTON. My full name is Joseph Nelson Benton, B-e-n-t-o-n.
Mr. HUBERT. I understand, however, that in your profession you do not
use the name Joseph but are known as Nelson Benton
Mr. BENTON. That's right.
Mr. HUBERT. Where do you normally reside?
Mr, BENTON. 3201 St. Charles.
Mr. HUBERT. That's apartment 301?
Mr. BENTON. Apartment 321, I believe.
Mr. HUBERT. Apartment 321? What is your occupation, Mr. Benton?
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Mr. BENTON. I am a correspondent for CBS News.
Mr. HUBERT. How long have you been a correspondent for CBS News?
Mr. BENTON. I have been employed by CBS News for 4 years. I have been a
correspondent since February. I'll clarify that. Correspondent is a title. I have been a
reporter for CBS News since 1960.
Mr. HUBERT. And what was your occupation prior to that, sir?
Mr. BENTON. I was a reporter for a television station in Charlotte,
N.C.
Mr. HUBERT. Now, Mr. Benton, I am inquiring this morning about the
events of November 22 through November 24, 1963 in Dallas, in particular connection with
the death of President Kennedy and the death of Lee Harvey Oswald, and the connection of
Jack Ruby with the latter event. Is it a fact that you were assigned as a correspondent
for CBS to cover the Presidential visit to Dallas on November 22?
Mr. BENTON. That is correct.
Mr. HUBERT. When did you arrive there, sir?
Mr. BENTON. I arrived on Thursday, November 21.
Mr. HUBERT. Now, where were you when the President was shot?
Mr. BENTON. I was at television station KRLD, which is located, I
believe, on Camp Street.
Mr. HUBERT. Now, after the President was shot and after his death,
where did you go?
Mr. BENTON. I went to Parkland Memorial Hospital.
Mr. HUBERT. How long did you stay there?
Mr. BENTON. Approximately 2 hours. A little less than 2 hours.
Mr. HUBERT. Would you state for the record, please, approximately when
you got there and approximately when you left?
Mr. BENTON. I arrived at the hospital at approximately 1 p.m. central
standard time. I would guess that I left around 2:30 or 2:45 central standard time.
Mr. HUBERT. Do you know a Scripps-Howard reporter or correspondent by
the name of Seth Kantor?
Mr. BENTON. I do not.
Mr. HUBERT. Now you, of course, subsequent to November 22, saw and
identified and could now identify a man by the name of Jack Leon Ruby, is that correct?
Mr. BENTON. I certainly could.
Mr. HUBERT. Did you see him at Parkland Memorial Hospital--
Mr. BENTON. I did not.
Mr. HUBERT. On the 22d?
Mr. BENTON No, sir.
Mr. HUBERT. Did you remain in any particular place at Parkland or did
you move around?
Mr. BENTON. I moved around from the emergency entrance, where I talked
to Senator Yarborough--Senator Yarborough was in a car about three cars behind the
Presidential car--that was the first spot to which I went. The second spot was a pressroom
which had been set up, which, I believe was a nursing classroom. That's the spot at which
the announcement of the President's death was made. The other place to which I went at the
hospital was the nurses' quarters, which is across the street about 100 yards, and my
purpose in going there was to get to a pay phone since all the phones leading to the
hospital were jammed up at the time.
Mr. HUBERT. Would you tell us about what time you left Parkland to go
to the nurses' home?
Mr. BENTON. Well, this was not to go and stay. This was a shuttle. I
went over there several times. The first time I went was after interviewing Senator
Yarborough, which I would guess to be shortly after 1p.m. The next time I went was after
Mr. Kilduff had announced that the President was dead.
Mr. HUBERT. Could you tell us the circumstances under which that
announcement was made?
Mr. BENTON. Yes, sir. There was a room with, I would guess, 40 to 50
reporters in it. Mr. Kilduff came in and yelled to everybody to be quiet and sit down. He
said, "I have to announce that the President of the United States died at
approximately 1 p.m. central standard time of bullet wounds in the
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head. I have no further details." His statement was a little more complete. I think
he said. President John F. Kennedy.
Mr. HUBERT. At approximately what time was that?
Mr. BENTON. Right at 1:30 central standard time.
Mr. HUBERT. Can you fix that by reason of some event that stays in your
memory?
Mr. BENTON. I looked at my watch and tried to compute the time, or was
looking to see how fast we had been advised.
Mr. HUBERT. Had you been told previous to the announcement by Mr.
Kilduff that there would be an announcement and to congregate at that time and place or
how did it happen?
Mr. BENTON. Someone suggested we congregate there. A Wayne Hawks, who
is a White House aide, a civil service person, he suggested we all move up there. There
had been a large number of people congregated around the emergency entrance.
Mr. HUBERT. And that suggestion by Mr. Hawks was made at what time?
Mr. BENTON. I can only say between--some time between 1 p.m. and 1:30.
I don't know exactly.
Mr. HUBERT. But it was after you had spoken to Senator Yarborough?
Mr. BENTON. That's correct. Senator Yarborough was the first person
that I spoke to when I arrived at the hospital.
Mr. HUBERT. And that was 1 o'clock, you said, approximately?
Mr. BENTON. I can only guess. Approximately 1 o'clock.
Mr. HUBERT. Then you went across to the nurses' home to make your
telephone call and came back and it was after that the announcement was made to
congregate? Perhaps we can approach it this way: Do you remember how long you had been in
the room, after the announcement by Mr. Hawks?
Mr. BENTON. Not very long. I would say 10 minutes.
Mr. HUBERT. So that backing off of 1:30, it would be fair to say Mr.
Hawks must have announced that the correspondents should collect about 1:20 or
somewhere---
Mr. BENTON. Mr. Hawks did not say gather at any time. I just recall his
saying: let's go up. We set up a pressroom. Something to that effect.
Mr. HUBERT. And that would have been about 1:20 or some time--
Mr. BENTON. I would guess; yes.
Mr. HUBERT. Now, after you left Parkland Memorial, where did you go?
Mr. BENTON. I went to the jail.
Mr. HUBERT. And then after that, where did you go?
Mr. BENTON. I think I returned to KRLD.
Mr. HUBERT. At what time did you first go to the Dallas City Jail
Building?
Mr. BENTON. It was some time in the evening of Friday, the 22d.
Mr. HUBERT. You were not there in the afternoon at all?
Mr. BENTON. I was not there in the afternoon when the arrest---
Mr. HUBERT. When you say evening, of course, you mean after nightfall?
Mr. BENTON. I would guess around 7 or 8 o'clock in the evening.
Mr. HUBERT. How long did you stay?
Mr. BENTON. I stayed until after midnight.
Mr. HUBERT. Now, did you see Jack Ruby at any time during the period
you have just stated, from 8 to midnight, on the night of the 22d at the Dallas City
Police Jail?
Mr. BENTON. I did.
Mr. HUBERT. You did not know him at the time, is that correct?
Mr. BENTON. No.
Mr. HUBERT. How do you associate the man you now know to be Ruby as a
man that you saw?
Mr. BENTON. Because of something he said. Well, I told the FBI the man
was wearing a white on white shirt, and we I hadn't seen many wearing white on white
shirts. It was---
Mr. HUBERT. You mean a white tie on a white shirt?
Mr. BENTON. No; I mean a white shirt with white figures
embroidered--what appeared to be embroidered figures in the shirt. I noticed him because
of something he said to District Attorney Wade, I believe it was. Wade was discussing
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the political background of Lee Oswald and Wade said something to the effect, and this is
not a direct quote, "Well, I think he's a member of that Free Cuba group;"
whereupon, Jack Ruby corrected Wade and said, "No, it's the Fair Play for Cuba and
there's a great difference between the two and I wanted to point that out."
Mr. HUBERT. Did Wade acknowledge that correction?
Mr. BENTON. Wade said, "Well," something like that. His
answer is not clear in my mind.
Mr. HUBERT. Where did that take place? I mean, what part of the jail?
Mr. BENTON. To the best of my recollection, it occurred in what is
called the assembly room, which is a room to which Oswald was taken that night to make a
statement to the press. And to the best of my knowledge this occurred after Oswald had
been in and---
Mr. HUBERT. Left? Do you know what time that was?
Mr. BENTON. Some time between 11 o'clock and midnight.
Mr. HUBERT. Now, the FBI report of the interview with you on December
1, 1963, indicates that Ruby's comment in regard to the difference between "Free
Cuba," and a "Fair Play for Cuba," was made to correct Chief of Police
Curry, whereas you have stated now that it was made to Mr. Wade, the district attorney.
Mr. BENTON. I don't recall saying that it was Chief Curry. I recall it
was---
Mr. HUBERT. But you now remember it was made to correct Wade's remark
and not Curry's remark?
Mr. BENTON. That is correct.
Mr. HUBERT. Did you see Ruby prior to that time?
Mr. BENTON. No, sir; I did not.
Mr. HUBERT. Did you see him after?
Mr. BENTON. Yes, sir.
Mr. HUBERT. I mean on the 22d.
Mr. BENTON. No, sir.
Mr. HUBERT. Now, when you did see him on the 22d, and your attention
was brought to him by the remark that he made, what was he doing?
Mr. BENTON. What was he, Ruby, doing?
Mr. HUBERT. Yes.
Mr. BENTON. I don't recall, sir. A number of reporters were talking to
Wade.
Mr. HUBERT. He was in the room with them, is that right?
Mr. BENTON. He was in the room.
Mr. HUBERT. Had you seen him at all before that remark in that room?
Mr. BENTON. No, sir. My attention was concentrated on Oswald at the
time.
Mr. HUBERT. Now, did you see Ruby on Saturday, November 23, at any
time?
Mr. BENTON. I don't recall seeing him then.
Mr. HUBERT. Were you in the jail, the Dallas jail, during any time on
Saturday, the 23d?
Mr. BENTON. Yes, sir. As I recall, I was there most of the day.
Mr. HUBERT. Now, passing to Sunday, November 24, I think you had
mentioned heretofore to the FBI that you had an interview with Chief of Police Curry?
Mr. BENTON. That's correct.
Mr. HUBERT. About what time was that?
Mr. BENTON. I have to space these things back according to specific
events. I would guess it was some time between 9 and 10 a.m.
Mr. HUBERT. Well, let's start it this way. What time did you get there
on Sunday morning?
Mr. BENTON. I think about 8:30.
Mr. HUBERT. And you went right up to the third floor?
Mr. BENTON. That is correct.
Mr. HUBERT. By the way, did you have any identification?
Mr. BENTON. Yes; I did.
Mr. HUBERT. Were you challenged?
Mr. BENTON. I was.
Mr. HUBERT. I take It from what you have told us that during the
period, November 22 through 24, 1963, you went in and out of the jailhouse and the third
floor on quite a number of occasions?
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Mr. BENTON. That is true.
Mr. HUBERT. Were you challenged at all times or once or twice?
Mr. BENTON. Not directly challenged. For purposes of the President's
visit, press passes that you pin on your jacket were issued in Dallas. I had one of those,
which had been issued me prior to the President's arrival, which I wore.
Mr. HUBERT. Did you wear that at all times in the period in question?
Mr. BENTON. I wore that at all times. On Sunday, the security at the
police department and jail was far more strict than it had been on the previous 2 days.
There were times when I was asked to show additional identification. I don't remember
specifically which times, but on the morning of Sunday, November 24, when I entered the
jail, I was stopped, asked to show identification, and for the purpose I showed a
Department of Defense accreditation which has my name and picture on it issued by the
Department of Defense. And my name was taken at the time by a plainclothesman, of course.
Mr. HUBERT. Where did that occur?
Mr. BENTON. That occurred on the street floor of the police department.
Not the basement, but what I presume you would call the main floor.
Mr. HUBERT. You mean by the elevators or---
Mr. BENTON. In the vicinity of the elevators; yes, sir.
Mr. HUBERT. On which side? Commerce?
Mr. BENTON. I entered the building from--let's see. Is it Main Street
and Commerce Street or Commerce Street and Main? At any rate, I entered from the I believe
it's Main, Commerce, and Harwood that bound the city jail, and I think I entered from
the---
Mr. HUBERT. Let me put it this way. If a person is in the jailhouse and
is looking toward Harwood he will find Commerce on his left and Main on his right.
Mr. BENTON. Well, I entered, then, from the Commerce Street side.
Mr. HUBERT. And it was there you were challenged as to your identity?
Mr. BENTON. That's correct; yes, sir.
Mr. HUBERT. Now, you mentioned a distinction between the security
measures you observed on Sunday and those that you observed on the previous days and I
wonder if you could tell us a bit more about that. I think you said that it was much
tighter or Something like that.
Mr. BENTON. It was tighter to the extent that a plainclothesman, who
was in the company of another plainclothesman, not only asked to see my credentials but
wrote my name down at that time, and I presume the name of my association.
Mr. HUBERT. Well, did you see, on the previous days, anybody going in
without any kind of identification? In and out?
Mr. BENTON. No, sir; I did not.
Mr. HUBERT. Well, now returning to the interview with Curry, which you
said occurred between 9 and 10, was that interview with Curry by you alone or was the
interview of Curry by several news persons?
Mr. BENTON. As I recall, this particular one was either by me, alone,
or perhaps one other network reporter.
Mr. HUBERT. Where did that take place?
Mr. BENTON. It took place in the large anteroom into which Chief
Curry's office adjoins.
Mr. HUBERT. Was this taped in any way? Was it a radio or television
interview?
Mr. BENTON. Yes, sir; it was television, and, to my knowledge, I think
it was taped. I don't know whether it was ,broadcast live or taped. I did not have direct
communications with New York. That was through the truck. I merely relayed; I have
something, and I was given a cue to go, and what disposition they made of it; I don't
know.
Mr. HUBERT. I understand. This was what station again?
Mr. BENTON. Sir?
Mr. HUBERT. What television station?
Mr. BENTON. This was KRLD. We had employed the facilities of KRLD, and,
of course, it was--we were all doing the same thing. It got to a point there, was no
distinction between us and their people. We were all working together.
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Mr. HUBERT. So that interview was actually a live interview of Curry
with you doing the questioning?
Mr. BENTON. It was on a live camera. Whether it was broadcast live, I
don't know.
Mr. HUBERT. But you, doing the questioning, I presume you were on the
screen, or were both of you on the screen?
Mr. BENTON. Both of us were on the screen, I presume.
Mr. HUBERT. Now, you just simply asked Curry for that interview and got
it? Is that it?
Mr. BENTON. That's correct.
Mr. HUBERT. How long did it last, do you remember?
Mr. BENTON. Probably 5 minutes.
Mr. HUBERT. Now, I assume there is a tape available on that; but,
anyhow, can you tell us the general nature of what was said?
Mr. BENTON. The general nature, as I recall it--the only specific
reason that I did the interview was to point out that Chief Curry had planned to bring an
armored car to the as I recall it now, the Commerce Street side of the jail, in which to
transport Oswald to the county jail.
Mr. HUBERT. In other words, you had the information that an armored car
was going to be used and you wished to have an interview to develop that, is that correct?
Mr. BENTON. That's correct.
Mr. HUBERT. How did you learn there was to be an armored car used?
Mr. BENTON. For the life of me, I can't tell you. I picked it up.
Mr. HUBERT. Did you see it?
Mr. BENTON. I did.
Mr. HUBERT. And was this interview of Curry before you saw it or
afterwards?
Mr. BENTON. I think probably it was before.
Mr. HUBERT. In other words, you heard there was to be an armored car,
then you interviewed Curry, and then, later, you saw the armored car?
Mr. BENTON. That's correct.
Mr. HUBERT. Did Curry tell you why an armored car was going to be used?
Mr. BENTON. His answer was; this is not---something to the effect
that--this is not an ordinary prisoner. We want to take every security measure we can.
Mr. HUBERT. Now, I think perhaps you stated--what you have given to the
FBI, in their report in the interview of December 1, is that this was at 9 o'clock. And I
believe you told us a few moments ago it was somewhere between 9 and 10.
Mr. BENTON. That's correct.
Mr. HUBERT. You can't fix it any closer?
Mr. BENTON. No, sir; I don't think I can fix it any closer.
Mr, HUBERT. Do you recall whether Chief Curry had made any announcement
on Saturday night, November the 23d, as to the movement of Oswald the next day?
Mr. BENTON. Chief Curry said something to the effect that: if you
fellows are here by 10 o'clock, you'll be all right. I heard no announcement saying that
Lee Oswald would be moved at 10 o'clock.
Mr. HUBERT. At the time of the interview with Curry on the 24th, did he
state at that time when Oswald would be moved?
Mr. BENTON. To my knowledge, to my recollection, he did not say a
specific time.
Mr. HUBERT. How long after this interview ended did you leave the third
floor to go down, wherever you did go?
Mr. BENTON. Mr. Hubert, I could only guess. This was a time during
which we were guessing ourselves, and I really don't know. I think---
Mr. HUBERT. Let's put it this way. After the interview with Curry was
over, where did you go? Do you remember?
Mr. BENTON. I think I may have gone down to Commerce Street where our
mobile unit was located. I think I may have gone down there several times and returned.
But I would not be able to say at what. time or how long I stayed at a given place. I
circulated between the third floor, the mobile unit we had located on Commerce Street and
the basement entrance to the jail.
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Mr. HUBERT. Where was your mobile unit located?
Mr. BENTON. It was located on Commerce Street, right outside the
building, the old municipal building.
Mr. HUBERT. Could you name some of the people who were connected with
the mobile unit?
Mr. BENTON. The director was a man by the name of Lee Webb. One of the
cameramen's names was English, I believe. Harold English. I'm not sure. These are not CBS
employees. They were KRLD employees.
Mr. HUBERT. KRLD is what city?
Mr. BENTON. Dallas; it's owned by the Times Herald.
Mr. HUBERT. Did you see another mobile unit belonging to another TV
station along in them?
Mr. BENTON. Yes, sir; I did.
Mr. HUBERT. How far away?
Mr. BENTON. As I recall, it was adjacent to ours.
Mr. HUBERT. Was there a crowd on Commerce Street at that time?
Mr. BENTON. Not a large crowd; no, sir.
Mr. HUBERT. Do you recall seeing a crowd on the opposite side of
Commerce Street?
Mr. BENTON. Yes; a small crowd. Less than 100 people.
Mr. HUBERT. They were controlled by police; were they?
Mr. BENTON. There seemed no need for control. I'm sure there were some
police out there but
Mr. HUBERT. Well, in the area of your mobile unit, I take it that there
were not many people congregated?
Mr. BENTON. That's correct.
Mr. HUBERT. It was fairly clear? There were some police personnel and
that was about it?
Mr. BENTON. That's right.
Mr. HUBERT. I understand, too, from what you said, that between the
time of your arrival there at 8:30 until the time of the shooting, which was somewhere
around 11:20, that you commuted, as it were, from the jail down to your mobile unit?
Mr. BENTON. Not from the jail; no, sir. I was never in the jail itself.
Mr. HUBERT. I mean the jail building.
Mr. BENTON. Right. From the third floor to the mobile unit.
Mr. HUBERT. And how many times do you suppose you commuted in that way?
Mr. BENTON. It's only a guess. I would say at least four or five times.
Mr. HUBERT. Now, at any time that you did so commute, did you see the
man that you have subsequently come to know as Jack Ruby in that area?
Mr. BENTON. No, sir; I did not.
Mr. HUBERT. Now, where were you at the time the actual shooting
occurred?
Mr. BENTON. I was in the mobile unit.
Mr. HUBERT. How long had you been there?
Mr. BENTON. Less than 10 minutes.
Mr. HUBERT. Where did you come from?
Mr. BENTON. I had come from the third floor of the building.
Mr. HUBERT. Why did you leave the third floor to go to the mobile unit?
Mr. BENTON. I had an indication from someone, and I cannot say who
because I just don't recall, that the move was imminent.
Mr. HUBERT. How did that indication come to you?
Mr. BENTON. It could have come from another reporter. It could have
come from a police official. I don't know. It may have just come from instinct.
Mr. HUBERT. Did you see any movement that indicated that something like
that was imminent?
Mr. BENTON. I guess I saw more lack of movement. There weren't many
people on the third floor.
Mr. HUBERT. And theretofore there had been?
Mr. BENTON. So that could have triggered an instinct. I don't know. I
had stayed up there because earlier I had asked Huffaker, H-u-f-f-a-k-e-r, who is a
reporter for KRLD it had been decided that he would stay at the jail entrance and I would
stay in the mobile unit where I could see what all of our cameras
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were picking up, rather than only on one scene. I knew that he was at the basement
entrance to the jail and I knew that we were covered there. Consequently, I felt free to
roam, to a certain extent, and pick up information.
Mr. HUBERT. Do you remember about what time it was that the movement of
the. press people on the third floor began?
Mr. BENTON. No, sir; and I don't think it was any unanimous thing at
all. I think it was just strictly moving around.
Mr. HUBERT. Let's put it this way. I understand there was quite a crowd
of people there, say an hour before the transfer?
Mr. BENTON. That's true.
Mr. HUBERT. And then 10 minutes or so before you left, the crowd had
cleared out considerably?
Mr. BENTON. That is correct.
Mr. HUBERT. Do you remember any announcement or any statement by anyone
that Oswald would be moved by use of the basement ramps?
Mr. BENTON. No, sir; I don't. I think this may have been something that
we assumed since we knew that there was a basement entrance to the jail which connected to
an elevator. I think we assumed he would be moved by some sort of vehicle. There were some
of us who were not convinced the armored car was going to be used, and, as I later found
out, there was no intention of using the armored car, which later I was told.
Mr. HUBERT. Now, at the time you left, which you stated was roughly 10
minutes before the shooting occurred, did you see any movement in Captain Fritz' office to
indicate that movement was imminent?
.Mr. BENTON. No, sir.
Mr. HUBERT. Did you see Oswald, particularly, in Captain Fritz' office
at that time?
Mr. BENTON. No, sir; I did not see Oswald at all on the morning of the
24th. The only place I saw him was on a television screen.
Mr. HUBERT. Were you able to observe whether the detectives from the
bureaus were leaving their offices to go down to the basement area?
Mr. BENTON. I don't recall specifically noticing that. I do recall on
one of my trips that there was a large number of people congregated at the basement
entrance and---
Mr. HUBERT. Which basement entrance?
Mr. BENTON. This is the entrance in which Oswald was shot.
Mr. HUBERT. Oh, you mean---
Mr. BENTON. The ramp.
Mr. HUBERT (continuing). The corridor that goes through the little jail
office from the elevator?
Mr. BENTON. It doesn't go through the jail office, sir.
Mr. HUBERT. Well, there is a corridor
Mr. BENTON. There's a corridor that leads from, I believe, the spot
where you pay traffic tickets that leads out.
Mr. HUBERT. Swinging doors and then the corridor and then it leads into
the basement ramp?
Mr. BENTON. That's right.
Mr. HUBERT. Which goes both ways, to Main and to Commerce. There is
some indication that at 10 o'clock on Sunday morning, that there was an expectation as to
a time when Oswald would be moved. Do you recall anything about that, sir?
Mr. BENTON. No, sir; I don't. I may have heard it at the time but I
remember no official announcement whatsoever that: we're going to move him at such and
such an hour.
Mr. HUBERT. I gather from your statement that your interview with Curry
must have ended prior to 10 o'clock?
Mr. BENTON. Yes, sir; I'm sure that it did.
Mr. HUBERT. That would mean there was an hour and 20 minutes between
the end of the interview and the actual shooting of Oswald. During that interval, I take
it, also, you were moving around as you described?
Mr. BENTON. That's correct.
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Mr. HUBERT. Until ultimately, you cable down to monitor the various
pictures that were being picked up by your cameras?
Mr. BENTON. Yes, sir.
Mr. HUBERT. During ,that period from 10 until the time you last left
before the shooting, did you see anything or hear anything to indicate a time of movement
or a schedule of movement?
Mr. BENTON. No, sir.
Mr. HUBERT. At any time was the route to be used, within the jail,
first, and then after leaving the jail, or either of those two routes, discussed or
commented upon by any public official that you know?
Mr. BENTON. I think the route from the jail to the courthouse was
discussed.
Mr. HUBERT. That is to say, outside the jail?
Mr. BENTON. That's right.
Mr. HUBERT. On the streets?
Mr. BENTON. Yes, sir. My memory is hazy. I can only say I think,
because I am not sure. I think that in the interview I had with Chief Curry that that
route was discussed and that--please understand this is a vague recollection. You plan on
one thing and then it gets torn up and you lose a few details. But as I recall, I think I
was told, in the discussion of the armored car, that he would be taken down Commerce
Street to the jail, which, as I recall, Commerce Street goes past one side of the
building, and it's only necessary to make a right turn onto Houston Street to get to the
jail entrance. I believe that's correct.
I remember looking at a picture on the wall in that anteroom to which
Chief Curry's office adjoins. It's a picture taken from a high angle beyond the triple
overpass which shows Main Street, Elm Street, Commerce Street--you can see the jail
building, and, if someone will point it out to you, you can also see the top of the jail
building, and it seems to me there was some discussion of that route. There was some
discussion of a route between Chief Curry and myself, and whether we discussed merely
landmarks, and this was the way the President's motorcade went, or whether we discussed
the actual route of transportation for a prisoner, I don't remember.
Mr. HUBERT. Do you recall whether the time was discussed?
Mr. BENTON. No, sir; I don't recall the time being discussed.
Mr. HUBERT. Let me get this straight. Is it that no time was discussed
positively, or you don't remember whether it was or not?
Mr. BENTON. I don't think it was because I had some certain
journalistic qualms of my own about discussing the specific time and I don't think I asked
a question like that because I didn't feel it was proper.
Mr. HUBERT. Do you know whether anyone else asked the question?
Mr. BENTON. I'm sure they did.
Mr. HUBERT. Did you hear them?
Mr. BENTON. No, sir.
Mr. HUBERT. Now, as I understand it, there were no notes taken by you
during your interview of Chief Curry, is that correct?
Mr. BENTON. That's correct.
Mr. HUBERT. I think you have told me, in the discussion we had
immediately prior to the beginning of this deposition, that you had some 10 pages of notes
of the events of November 22 through the 24th but that it consisted mostly of names. Is
that correct?
Mr. BENTON. Yes, sir; and I think the majority of my notes were taken
prior to the 24th, because staring with.
Mr. HUBERT. Prior to the 24th?
Mr. BENTON. Yes, sir; prior to the 24th. Because starting on Saturday
morning, the 23d--well, let me digress a bit. Up until midnight Friday night I was working
with a film camera crew. Film has to be processed, edited, and prepared for broadcast.
Notes are very necessary if you want to determine which sections of the film to try to
grab and use, if it has to be done in a hurry. After that time, everything I was doing was
either being taped for fast tense or it was going out live. Consequently, from a purely
technical standpoint, there was no need for me to take notes. The story was in the hands
of the producer and the editors simultaneously by the time it occurred, and this, plus the
fact that I was
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in a rather large group of reporters, I had to hold a microphone in one hand. It was
physically impossible to take any notes.
Mr. HUBERT. So the majority of your notes were taken, really, on Friday
and Friday night?
Mr. BENTON. That's correct.
Mr. HUBERT. And those would have to do, you say, not so much with
information to be reported but with notes for your own use in editing, is that correct?
Mr. BENTON. That's right. I took a great number of notes at the
hospital because I was reporting after the fact rather than live.
Mr. HUBERT. I see. You say those notes are available?
Mr. BENTON. I think they are; yes, sir.
Mr. HUBERT. I wonder if you would undertake when you have an
opportunity to do so, to look them up and let me know about them. Well then have them
photostated or Xeroxed and return them to you.
Mr. BENTON. All right.
Mr. HUBERT. And I would ask you at the time you turn them over to us to
just jot on each page your name. and date. and just put: In re: deposition.
Mr. BENTON. All right.
Mr. HUBERT. So as to tie into this deposition without having to call
you back again, you see.
Mr. BENTON. Yes.
Mr. HUBERT. Now, is there anything else that you can think of that you
would like to make a part of this deposition?
Mr. BENTON. No, sir; I don't think so.
Mr. HUBERT. Now, is there anything that was discussed between us prior
to the beginning of this deposition that has not been covered and made a part of this
deposition by the actual recordation by the recorder here?
Mr. BENTON No, sir; I don't think so. I think you asked me one time
either you or the FBI asked me if I saw Jack Ruby again on November 24. I did, after he
had been arrested.
Mr. HUBERT. Yes, I did want to get that. Where did you see him next?
Mr. BENTON. I saw him in the corridor on the third floor of the police
station.
Mr. HUBERT. How long after the shooting was that?
Mr. BENTON. I would guess an hour.
Mr. HUBERT. You just saw him in passing or did you have an interview
with him or---
Mr. BENTON. He was being brought from the jail to Captain Fritz'
office.
Mr. HUBERT. You did not speak to him?
Mr. BENTON. I asked him a question and---
Mr. HUBERT. What question?
Mr. BENTON (continuing). He did not answer. I asked him why he did it.
Mr. HUBERT. That's the only time?
Mr. BENTON. He was brought down from the jail to Captain Fritz' office
and returned via the same route.
Mr. HUBERT. How long was he in Captain Fritz' office, would you say?
Mr. BENTON. I would say at least an hour; maybe longer.
Mr. HUBERT. And you first saw him about 12: 20?
Mr. BENTON. I would say between 12: 15 and 12: 30.
Mr. HUBERT. And you say he was in there I hour?
Mr. BENTON. At least an hour. It may have been longer.
Mr. HUBERT. And then he was brought back up again. Do you recall who
was with him at that time?
Mr. BENTON. He was in the custody of at least four or five officers. I
don't know who they were.
Mr. HUBERT. Do you know FBI Agent Hall?
Mr. BENTON. No, I do not.
Mr. HUBERT. Do you know Secret Service Agent Forrest Sorrels?
Mr. BENTON. I know the name. I think I know the face. I'm not sure.
Mr. HUBERT. Do you know whether he was there when Ruby was in Fritz'
office?
Mr. BENTON. I don't remember.
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Mr. HUBERT. Now, after Ruby was brought back upstairs, after having
been in Fritz' office at least 1 hour, did you see him again that day?
Mr. BENTON. No, sir.
Mr. HUBERT. All right. Now, when this deposition has been transcribed,
we would like to send you a copy so that you may read it and make what stylistic semantic
corrections you think should be made without changing the meaning, and then there will be
a place for you to sign and then you can return it. I will ask the stenographer to send
the transcript to me here. I will make some of these changes myself and send it on to you.
Mr. BENTON. Yes, sir.
Mr. HUBERT. At that time I will probably enclose a self-addressed and
stamped envelope to the Commission in Washington so that you may send it on. Now, where
will you be? I understand you are going to---
Mr. BENTON. San Francisco; tomorrow.
Mr. HUBERT. And you will be there until---
Mr. BENTON. I think until the 18th or 19th.
Mr. HUBERT. Could you tell me, Miss, when this will be in my hands?
The REPORTER. We normally have 2 weeks delivery. When would you need
it?
Mr. HUBERT. Well, could you have it in my hands by Tuesday, the 14th?
The REPORTER. Yes, I'm sure I can.
Mr. HUBERT. Where will you be staying?
Mr. BENTON. I'll be staying at the Hilton Hotel in San Francisco.
Mr. HUBERT. And you won't leave there until the 18th?
Mr. BENTON. That is the present plan.
Mr. HUBERT. Well, we'll try to send it out to you airmail special
delivery on the 14th so it ought to get there on the 15th or 16th and perhaps you'll have
a chance to look it over. In any case, send it on. I guess you will leave a forwarding
address. Could you be reached at this New Orleans address we have?
Mr. BENTON. Well, my wife would know where I am. The St. Charles Avenue
address.
Mr. HUBERT. Yes; and the CBS local would know?
Mr. BENTON. Well, she would probably come closer to knowing than they
would at CBS because quite often all of us are out of town.
Mr. HUBERT. All right, sir. Thank you very much.
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