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THE WITNESS: I don’t know.

MS. VAUGHAN: There’d be no reason to take it
off either. So we’ll look and see, but

MR. McGARRY: All right.

MR. FUGATE: Once again, for the record, all
of the originals of everything there is anoriginal
of
—— and i.e., what Laura Vaughan is saying, for the
record, you can tell the individual handwritten stuff
because it’s in blue ink, black ink, you can tell
it’s
—— it’s, you know, ink or pencil or whatever it
happens to be. With the typed stuff, unless there’s
something that makes it appear as if it was done with a
typewriter, it’s hard to tell whether it’s a copy or
the original.

But it’s all there, and you guys are welcome
to look at it whenever you want to in Zuckerxnan,
Spaeder’s office.

MR. McGARRY: All right.

BY MR. McGARRY:
Q.
So the answer to the question is, you —- you have
no knowledge of anything being changed or altered?

A.
No. No, I don’t.
Q.
Okay.
A.
I’m curious, I’ll have to look and see.
Q.
Couple other areas of documents tha’t we need to

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