Paging Mr. Collins, paging Mr. Collins............
From the HSCA report:
Is it still your view that a Saturday FBI interview is a figment of the imagination (mine and/or Mr. Rowland's)?
If we were to go by the dates listed in your image, we might assume that Arnold Rowland was interviewed twice by the FBI on Saturday 11/23/63. But a look at the documents shows two dates on the Heitman report (11/22/63 and 11/23/63). Arnold Rowland testifies to the WC that FBI agents were present for his 11/22/63 statement to the Dallas County Sheriff's Office. So, I think that it is reasonable to believe that Heitman's report dated 11/23/63 is just another account of what Arnold Rowland said in the Sheriff's Office on 11/22/63 which wasn't dictated for typing until 11/23/63. Another reason to believe this is the other Heitman FBI report, with the same dates, that is an interview of Barbara Rowland (see CE 2782 linked below).
Arnold Rowland testified that he was interviewed by the FBI on seven different dates. However, we only have records of three of these. There was apparently a lot of confusion regarding which interview took place on which date. Later on in his WC testimony, Arnold Rowland again states in no uncertain terms that:
Mr. SPECTER - Well, are you able to identify that statement which we have marked Exhibit 358, as the statement taken on Saturday, the 23d, as distinguished from the statement taken on Sunday, the 24th of November?
Mr. ROWLAND - Yes.
Mr. SPECTER - How can you be certain of that, Mr. Rowland?
Mr. ROWLAND - The one on Sunday, this particular one, I do remember the agent used a legal pad. He did have three pages of it handwritten. made corrections on this in different parts of it The one on Sunday was not a legal pad. It was a steno pad and it, in fact, covered a page and a half, I think, and it was concerned with mainly could I identify the man that I saw, his description.Now, Arnold Rowland explains that he told about the elderly black man after the interview was over "as an afterthought". And he says the also told the Agents that interviewed him on Sunday 11/24/63.
Mr. SPECTER - Now, at the time you made the Saturday statement, which you say was transcribed and appears as Exhibit 358, did you at that time tell the interviewing FBI agents about the colored gentleman who you testified was in the window which you marked with an "A"?
Mr. ROWLAND - Yes; I did.
Mr. SPECTER - Did you ask them at that time to include the information in the statement which they took from you?
Mr. ROWLAND - No. I think I told them about it after the statement, as an afterthought, an afterthought came up, it came into my mind. I also told the agents that took a statement from me on Sunday. They didn't seem very interested, so I just forgot about it for a while.That Arnold Rowland could have told two sets of FBI agents (four total agents) about a supposed elderly black man on the sixth floor, and that none of the four agents saw fit to include one word of it in their reports is just not believable, in my opinion.
Here is a link to CE 2782 which is a copy of the FBI reports in question:
https://history-matters.com/archive/jfk/wc/wcvols/wh26/pdf/WH26_CE_2782.pdfIn my opinion, there was a Saturday 11/22/63 interview by FBI agents Rice and Almon, and there was a Sunday 11/24/63 interview by FBI agents Wulf and Swinford. The other four "interviews" that Arnold Rowland testified took place apparently have no recorded reports. I would question whether or not Arnold Rowland mistook police investigators or news reporters for FBI agents because I believe there would be a record of it if they were FBI agents.