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Rawhide Down

Page 36

by Del Quentin Wilber


  Secret Service actions to protect, evaluated

  Secret Service and, as governor

  Secret Service and, before shooting

  sense of mission of, after shooting

  seventieth birthday party for

  Soviet Union and

  speech-making skill of

  transfer of authority question and

  Thatcher and

  Reagan Democrats

  Red Scare

  Regan, Donald

  Republican Party

  Resolute desk

  Revere, Paul

  Reynolds, Frank

  Rockoff, David

  Rogers, Ginger

  Romeo and Juliet (Shakespeare)

  Ronald Reagan Presidential Library

  Roosevelt, Franklin D.

  assassination attempt on

  Ruge, Daniel

  background of

  Brady and

  St. Elizabeths Hospital for the mentally ill

  St. John’s Episcopal Church

  St. Louis Cardinals

  Salinger, J. D.

  Saudi Arabia

  Scheele, Drew

  Schmidt, Helmut

  Schrader, Paul

  Scorsese, Martin

  Scouten, Rex

  Screen Actors Guild

  Secret Service

  assassination attempt and

  Bush and

  code names and

  errors of, evaluated

  Hilton security checks by

  Hinckley arrest and

  history of

  Nancy and

  Parr’s early career in

  Reagan aides guarded by

  Reagan brought to hospital by

  Reagan children and

  Reagan guarded by, at hospital

  Reagan’s inauguration and

  Reagan’s recovery and

  training of

  women in

  Seeger, Alan

  Shaddick, Ray

  Shakespeare, William

  Simpson, John

  Sinatra, Frank

  Situation Room

  Allen, Haig, and aides in, during operation

  Bush and

  dairy bill and

  Fielding and consideration of transfer of power to Bush

  Smith, William French

  Smith & Wesson Model 19

  Social Security

  Solidarity movement

  Soviet Union

  Allen and

  collapse of

  Reagan attempts to end Cold War with

  submarines and

  Speakes, Larry

  Spriggs, Danny

  Stahl, Lesley

  Stalin, Joseph

  Star Wars

  Stewart, Jimmy

  Strategic Air Command

  Strawberry Fields Forever (Garbarini and Cullman)

  Sullivan, Denise

  taxes

  Taxi Driver (film)

  Ted Bundy (Winn)

  “Ten Minute Medicine” course

  terrorism

  Texas and Southwestern Cattle Raisers Association

  Thatcher, Margaret

  Today (TV show)

  Trainor, Joe

  trauma care, improvements in

  Treasury Department

  Truman, Harry S.

  assassination attempt on

  Tsangaris, Neofytos

  U.S. Congress

  U.S. Constitution

  Twenty-fifth Amendment

  U.S. House of Representatives

  U.S. Senate

  Unrue, Drew

  Untermeyer, Chase

  Ursomarso, Frank

  Varey, Jim

  Villaneuva, Danny

  Wallace, George

  assassination attempt on

  Warner, Jack

  Washington Hilton

  advance security team at

  exit plan from

  Washington Hospital Center (WHC)

  Washington Post

  Washington Star

  Watergate scandal

  Weinberger, Caspar

  West Germany

  Whinerey, Judith

  White, Frederick

  White House Communications Agency

  Wilson, Edith

  Wilson, Woodrow

  World War II

  Wright, Jim

  Zimmerman, Jack

  ABOUT THE AUTHOR

  DEL QUENTIN WILBER is an award-winning reporter for The Washington Post. He has spent most of his career covering law enforcement and sensitive security issues, and his work has been a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize. He lives in Washington, D.C., with his wife and two sons.

  Henry Holt and Company, LLC

  Publishers since 1866

  175 Fifth Avenue

  New York, New York 10010

  www.henryholt.com

  Henry Holt® and ® are registered trademarks of Henry Holt and Company, LLC.

  Copyright © 2011 by Del Quentin Wilber

  All rights reserved.

  Photograph here courtesy of U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Columbia

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

  Wilber, Del Quentin.

  Rawhide down : the near assassination of Ronald Reagan / Del Quentin Wilber. — 1st ed.

  p. cm.

  Includes bibliographical references and index.

  ISBN 978-0-8050-9346-9

  1. Reagan, Ronald—Assassination attempt, 1981. I. Title.

  E877.3.W55 2011

  973.927092—dc22 2010049808

  First Edition 2011

  eISBN 978-1-4299-1931-9

  First Henry Holt eBook Edition: March 2011

  Courtesy Ronald Reagan Library

  On March 30, 1981, President Ronald Reagan delivered a speech to a branch of the AFL-CIO at the Washington Hilton hotel. The president, a former union leader in Hollywood, thought the address was important enough to rewrite the beginning by hand. Reagan began his twenty-minute speech just after two p.m.

  Courtesy Ronald Reagan Library

  At 2:27 p.m., just seconds before a would-be assassin opened fire on Reagan and his entourage, the president waved to spectators across the street. Walking on the president’s right, wearing a light-colored raincoat, was Secret Service agent Jerry Parr, head of Reagan’s protective detail.

  James K. W. Atherton/The Washington Post

  Hoping to get to know Reagan better, Jerry Parr had switched shifts so he could accompany the president to the speech. Parr saved the president’s life that day—twice.

  Alexander Fury/Courtesy U.S. Attorney’s Office

  That morning, John W. Hinckley Jr. spotted Reagan’s schedule in a local newspaper and at the last minute decided to go to the Hilton and attempt to kill the president. Clearly visible in back of several journalists and onlookers, Hinckley was inadvertently captured in this photograph by a hotel security official concerned about a noisy heckler.

  Courtesy Eddie Myers

  Federal agents and D.C. police detectives were confounded by Hinckley’s calm demeanor as they pressed him for information in the hours after the shooting. In this photograph taken by an FBI agent at the bureau’s Washington field office, D.C. police detective Eddie Myers is keeping a close eye on his suspect.

  Author’s collection

  Hinckley bought this R.G. Industries model RG 14 for about forty-five dollars at a Texas pawnshop in the fall of 1980, soon after three other handguns were taken from him at the Nashville airport following his stalking of then president Jimmy Carter. Before leaving for the Hilton, Hinckley loaded the revolver with explosive bullets.

  Courtesy Ronald Reagan Library

  Courtesy Ronald Reagan Library

  Courtesy Ronald Reagan Library

  Secret Service agents and D.C. police officers rushed at Hinckley as he unleashed a fusillade of bullets, but they were too late. Hinckley got off six shots in just 1.7 seconds; his bullets struck four people, including the president.
r />   AP Images

  Respected by reporters and White House staff members alike, press secretary James Brady made a last-second decision to attend Reagan’s speech at the Washington Hilton hotel. He was the first person wounded by one of Hinckley’s bullets and suffered a devastating head wound.

  AP Images

  That morning, D.C. police officer Thomas Delahanty had this official photograph taken in case anything bad should ever happen to him. Stationed at the rope line, he had just turned to orient himself to the president when he heard gunshots. He was struck in the back by Hinckley’s second shot.

  AP Images

  Secret Service agent Timothy McCarthy had hoped to avoid duty at the Hilton so his brand- new suit wouldn’t get wet in the rain. After opening the limousine’s door, McCarthy heard gunfire; swiveling, he became a human shield for the president. He was struck in the chest by Hinckley’s fourth bullet.

  Jack Buxbaum/The Washington Post

  After a frantic car ride from the White House, Nancy Reagan rushed into the emergency room entrance of George Washington University Hospital, where she learned that her husband had been wounded. A few steps behind Mrs. Reagan’s left shoulder was Secret Service agent George Opfer, who had told the first lady about the shooting.

  Frank Johnston/The Washington Post

  At a press conference a few days after the shooting, Dr. Benjamin Aaron, who had performed surgery on the president, pointed to a spot on Dr. Joseph Giordano’s left side to demonstrate where Hinckley’s sixth bullet had struck Reagan. Giordano, head of GW’s trauma teams, had led a recent effort to improve the hospital’s emergency medical care.

  Courtesy Ronald Reagan Presidential Foundation

  In the hours after his surgery, Reagan jotted a number of notes to doctors and nurses, and this was one of his first. The president also wrote about his difficulty breathing. “Why can’t I...”—visible just above “All in all I’d rather be in Phil.”—was almost certainly the beginning of a question about why he couldn’t breathe.

  James Thresher/The Washington Post

  Lyn Nofziger, a gruff White House aide, provided the first confirmation that the president had been wounded to reporters during a press conference outside the hospital. Watching Nofziger was Larry Speakes, a deputy White House press secretary. Nofizger later told reporters about the jokes delivered by the president while he was in the emergency room.

  D. Gorton/The New York Times/Redux

  Secretary of State Alexander Haig addressed reporters in the White House press room and famously asserted that he was “in control.” Standing next to Haig was National Security Advisor Richard V. Allen, who struggled to contain his shock when Haig mangled the order of presidential succession during the briefing.

  Courtesy Ronald Reagan Library

  The atmosphere in the Situation Room—a secure conference room on the ground floor of the White House—was tense throughout the afternoon, and the attention of the country’s leaders was often riveted on slow-motion replays of the shooting on the conference room’s single television.

  Courtesy George Bush Presidential Library and Museum

  Before issuing a statement to the press shortly after eight o’clock that evening, Vice President George H. W. Bush (left) conferred with top Reagan administration advisors. Clockwise from Bush’s left are Edwin Meese, James Baker, Caspar Weinberger, Fred Fielding, and William French Smith.

  Courtesy Ronald Reagan Library

  President Reagan, hugging the first lady, waved to a crowd of supporters who cheered his return to the White House on April 11, only twelve days after the assassination attempt. One advisor later commented that Reagan resembled a championship golfer strolling toward the eighteenth green.

  Courtesy Ronald Reagan Library

  On April 28, 1981, just four weeks after nearly being assassinated, the president delivered an address to a joint session of Congress following what one reporter called a “rafter-shaking ovation.” With his behavior immediately after the shooting and this speech to Congress, Reagan turned a near tragedy into a political triumph.

  Table of Contents

  Title Page

  Dedication

  Prologue

  1. Rendezvous with Destiny

  2. The Man

  3. Without Fail

  4. “I’m Not Dangerous”

  5. The Rope Line

  6. 2:27 P.M.

  7. “I Can’t Breathe”

  8. The Trauma Bay

  9. STAT to the ER

  10. “My God. The President Was Hit?”

  11. Operating Room 2

  12. A Question of Authority

  13. “I Am in Control Here”

  14. The Waiting Room

  15. “What Does the Future Hold?”

  Epilogue

  Notes

  Bibliography

  Acknowledgments

  Index

  About the Author

  Copyright

  Photo insert

  here

 

 

 


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