Mr. STURDIVAN. Well, the muzzle velocity of this bullet varies between 2,000 and 2,200 feet per second. It will have lost some velocity in traversing some distance. Say at 100 yards it would have about 1,800-feet-per-second velocity. One hundred yards was roughly, I think, the distance we are talking about here. So that would be 1,800 feet per second. Mr. FAUNTROY. And that is the velocity at which it would probably have hit a body from the distance that we know is from the sixth floor to where the President was at the time that his body was struck? Mr. STURDIVAN. Yes, sir. Mr. FAUNTROY. Could the bullet have gone through his neck at that time? Mr. STURDIVAN. Oh, yes; this bullet if only encountering a few inches of soft tissue would go through losing almost no velocity, 100 feet per second or thereabouts. Mr. FAUNTROY. So that while it was fired when it left the muzzle, it would have been over 2,000 feet, by the time it hit it would have been about 1,800 feet per second? Mr. STURDIVAN. Yes. Mr. FAUNTROY. And exiting the body, not striking any bone? Mr. STURDIVAN. Without striking any bone. Mr. FAUNTROY. Striking flesh it would have lost another what? Mr. STURDIVAN. One hundred feet per second or so. Being a little less than maybe 1,700 feet per second at that point.