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Warren H. Burroughs
The testimony of Warren H. Burroughs was taken at 9:15 a.m., on April
8, 1964, in the office of the U.S. attorney, 301 Post Office Building, Bryan and
Ervay Streets, Dallas, Tex., by Mr. Joseph A. Ball, assistant counsel of the
President's Commission.
Mr. BALL. Do you solemnly swear that the testimony you give before the
Com mission will be the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth, so
help you God?
Mr. BURROUGHS. Yes, sir.
Mr. BALL. State your name for the record, please.
Mr. BURROUGHS. Warren H. Burroughs.
Mr. BALL. Where do you live, Mr. Burroughs?
Mr. BURROUGHS. 407 Montreal.
Mr. BALL. Where were you born?
Mr. BURROUGHS. Dallas.
Mr. BALL. Where did you go to school?
Mr. BURROUGHS. Well, I'm going to private school 2 days a week. I stopped going
to public school in the ninth grade.
Mr. BALL. You quit in the ninth grade?
Mr. BURROUGHS. I stopped in the ninth grade, but I'm going to private school 2
days a week over in Highland Park.
Mr. BALL. You are now?
Mr. BURROUGHS. Yes; I am now.
Mr. BALL. How old are you?
Mr. BURROUGHS. Twenty-two.
Mr. BALL. What have you been doing most of your life what kind of work have you
been doing?
Mr. BURROUGHS. I worked at the Texas Theatre and I helped my dad out as an
apprentice, he is an electrician.
Mr. BALL. Were you ever in the Army?
Mr. BURROUGHS. No, sir----they tried to get me, but I couldn't pass----I passed
the physical part, but the mental part----I didn't make enough points on the
score, so the board sent me a card back and classifying me different.
Mr. BALL. On November 22, 1963, you were working at the Texas Theatre, were you?
Mr. BURROUGHS. Yes, sir.
Mr. BALL. What kind of job did you have?
Mr. BURROUGHS. During the week I worked behind the concession. On weekends I
usher.
Mr. BALL. On weekends you usher?
Mr. BURROUGHS. Yes, sir.
Mr. BALL. During the week?
Mr. BURROUGHS. I am behind the concession.
Mr. BALL. During the afternoon of the week----do you take tickets too?
Mr. BURROUGHS. Yes----I take tickets every day.
Mr. BALL. You do?
Mr. BURROUGHS. Yes.
Mr. BALL. And, run the concession?
Mr. BURROUGHS. Yes.
Mr. BALL. If anybody comes in there without a ticket, what do you do, run them
off?
Mr. BURROUGHS. I make it a point to stop them and ask them to go out and get a
ticket. I just failed to see him when he slipped in.
Mr. BALL. We will get to that in a minute I want to see what you usually do if
somebody comes in without a ticket.
Mr. BURROUGHS. I stop them and have them go out to the box office and get an
admission ticket.
Mr. BALL. On this day of November 22, 1963, what time did you go to work?
Mr. BURROUGHS. I went to work at 12.
Mr. BALL. You went to work that day at 12?
Mr. BURROUGHS. That day at 12 o'clock----yes.
Mr. BALL. And you later saw a struggle in the theatre between a man and some
officers, didn't you?
Mr. BURROUGHS. Yes.
Mr. BALL. Did you see that man come in the theatre?
Mr. BURROUGHS. No, sir; I didn't.
Mr. BALL. Do you have any idea what you were doing when he came in?
Mr. BURROUGHS. Well, I was----I had a lot of stock candy to count and put in the
candy case for the coming night, and if he had came around in front of the
concession out there, I would have seen him, even though I was bent down, I
would have seen him, but otherwise I think he sneaked up the stairs real fast.
Mr. BALL. Up to the balcony?
Mr. BURROUGHS. Yes, sir----first, I think he was up there.
Mr. BALL. At least there was a stairway there?
Mr. BURROUGHS. Yes, there was two.
Mr. BALL. Is there a stairway near the entry?
Mr. BURROUGHS. Of the door----yes. Yes, it goes straight----you come through the
door and go straight----you go upstairs to the balcony.
Mr. BALL. Did anybody come in there that day? Up to the time of the struggle
between the man and the police who didn't have a ticket?
Mr. BURROUGHS. No, sir.
Mr. BALL. Later on the police came in your place?
Mr. BURROUGHS. Yes.
Mr. BALL. They asked you if you had seen a man come in there without a ticket?
Mr. BURROUGHS. Yes.
Mr. BALL. What did you tell him?
Mr. BURROUGHS. I said, "I haven't seen him myself. He might have, but I didn't
see him when he came in. He must have sneaked in and run on upstairs before I
saw him."
Mr. BALL. Later on, did somebody point out a man in the theatre to you?
Mr. BURROUGHS. No----I got information that a man----the police were cruising up
and down Jefferson hunting for Oswald, and he ran to a shoestore and then came
out and came on up to the Texas, and the man came in and told me that a man
fitting that description came in the show and he wanted me to help him find him,
and we went and checked the exit doors, he was up in the balcony, I imagine, and
then we went back out and the police caught him downstairs.
Mr. BALL. You went to check the exit doors?
Mr. BURROUGHS. Yes.
Mr. BALL. With the shoe salesman?
Mr. BURROUGHS. Yes.
Mr. BALL. And were the police out at the exit doors?
Mr. BURROUGHS. They came on----somehow they came in----one came in through the
back and the rest of them came in through the front.
Mr. BALL. Did you see them come in through the back when you were back there?
Mr. BURROUGHS. I saw one of them.
Mr. BALL. The exit doors you are talking about were in the back or in the front?
Mr. BURROUGHS. They are at the back---they have one main one going out to the
alley and they have one down here by the stage going out to the parking lot, and
the other two are upstairs.
Mr. BALL. Did you see any struggle or fight between this man and any police
officer?
Mr. BURROUGHS. No; not exactly, because I just had one door open and that was
the middle door, and I couldn't see them----that was the main thing.
Mr. BALL. Where were you?
Mr. BURROUGHS. I was back behind the concession.
Mr. BALL. How do you get from the exit door in the rear of the theatre to behind
the concession?
Mr. BURROUGHS. Well, the concession is right here [indicating] and the doors are
right here, and the theatre is inside, and exit door No. I is straight down this
way and another one is straight down this way.
Mr. BALL. Tell me what you did after you went to the exit door with the shoe
salesman; what did you do?
Mr. BURROUGHS. Well, he went down to this door and I stayed at this door.
Mr. BALL. You mean at the rear of the theatre?
Mr. BURROUGHS. Yes----he went down to the rear of the theatre, and I stayed at
this door in case he went out one of the exit doors.
Mr. BALL. You stayed there, did you?
Mr. BURROUGHS. I stayed there for about 5 minutes and I came back out to the
concession.
Mr. BALL. Down the main aisle?
Mr. BURROUGHS. Yes.
Mr. BALL. Were there police in there at that time?
Mr. BURROUGHS. They were in there checking to see where he was.
Mr. BALL. Was there any struggle going on when you came back from the exit door
to the concession?
Mr. BURROUGHS. No.
Mr. BALL. There was not?
Mr. BURROUGHS. No.
Mr. BALL. Did you hear or see any trouble between this man and the police?
Mr. BURROUGHS. Well, I heard a struggle from outside, but I really couldn't
tell.
Mr. BALL. What did you hear?
Mr. BURROUGHS. Well, I couldn't hear anything on the inside, but when they
brought him out, he was hollering and raising, "I demand my rights," and all
that.
Mr. BALL. What else did you hear?
Mr. BURROUGHS. That's about all.
Mr. BALL. Tell me what his appearance was as they brought him out?
Mr. BURROUGHS. Well, he didn't seem---he seemed like he was mad at everybody.
Mr. BALL. He was?
Mr. BURROUGHS. Yes.
Mr. BALL. Did he shout in a loud voice?
Mr. BURROUGHS. Yes; like "I demand my rights" [witness holding up both above his
head.]
Mr. BALL. Anything else?
Mr. BURROUGHS. Well, they carried him out to the car and there was a mob of
people out there mere people than I have ever seen before and they put him in
the car and went off.
Mr. BALL. How many officers were with him? When you saw them take him from the
theatre?
Mr. BURROUGHS. I believe about three or four.
Mr. BALL. Did any of them have ahold of him?
Mr. BURROUGHS. Yes; they had ahold of him----they were dragging him out----I
mean., they had ahold of him---two on each side.
Mr. BALL. Was he walking or were they dragging him?
Mr. BURROUGHS. He was walking, but he was kind of urged on out the door into the
car.
Mr. BALL. Was he handcuffed?
Mr. BURROUGHS. Yes.
Mr. BALL. Were his hands behind him or in front of him?
Mr. BURROUGHS. They were behind him.
Mr. BALL. Did you ever see a police officer strike him?
Mr. BURROUGHS. No.
Mr. BALL. Did you see a police officer with his arm around the neck of this man,
who arrested him?
Mr. BURROUGHS. I don't believe so.
Mr. BALL. Did you ever see a police officer strike this man with the butt of a
shotgun?
Mr. BURROUGHS. No, sir.
Mr. BALL. Were any of the officers in the theatre armed with shotguns?
Mr. BURROUGHS. No, sir; I don't believe so.
Mr. BALL. I think that's all, Mr. Burroughs, and this will be written up and you
can go down and sign it if you wish, or you can waive your signature right now.
Which do you prefer?
Mr. BURROUGHS. I want to come down and sign it.
Mr. BALL. All right. You will be notified to come down and you can read it over
and sign it. Thank you very much for coming down here.
Mr. BURROUGHS. Thank you. I hope I helped you some.
Mr. BALL. Yes; I hope you did, too.
Mr. BURROUGHS. I'll see you later.
Mr. BALL. All right. Goodby.
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