:16:00
But he'd done some
on-the-spot work, you see.
:16:04
And the flange was kind of...
:16:06
...banged away to make room
for the one that was too big.
:16:10
Would this "too big" battery have fit, say...
:16:14
...in Kazuo Miyamoto's battery well?
:16:17
It was the exact same type as Miyamoto's,
that's for sure, but...
:16:20
...he had both of his batteries in
when we searched his boat later on, so...
:16:46
Ifyou fall off a motorcycle,
the injuries look different.
:16:49
In this case, the injury had been inflicted
by a long, narrow, flat object.
:16:55
- Like a fishing gaff, for example?
- That's very possible.
:17:01
You say it was a laceration about
two and a half inches long...
:17:06
...over the left ear.
:17:08
The bone under it
fractured over a four-inch area.
:17:12
What would've caused that?
:17:14
I'll tell you what a head wound like this
puts me in mind of.
:17:18
I've seen wounds exactly like this...
:17:21
...many times in the war.
:17:24
Have you seen this specific kind
of wound before?
:17:27
Frequently, as a result
of hand-to-hand combat with Jap soldiers.
:17:31
I even told Art:
:17:32
"You wanna play Sherlock Holmes,
look for a Jap with a bloody gun butt."
:17:37
What led you to that conclusion?
:17:39
I've seen these kendo wounds many times,
exactly like this one.
:17:44
Could you tell us what kendo is?
:17:57
Kendo is Japanese stick fighting.
:17:59
They train as kids, you know,
to kill with sticks.