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135838604
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Assassination Attempt on Pres. 03/31/1981 [1 of 2]
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135838604
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Assassination Attempt on Pres. 03/31/1981 [1 of 2]
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Records of the White House Office of Cabinet Affairs (Reagan Administration)
Craig Fuller's Office Files
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Ronald Reagan Presidential Library Digital Library Collections This is a PDF of a folder from our textual collections. Collection: Fuller, Craig: Files Folder Title: Assassination Attempt on Pres. 03/31/1981 [1 of 2] Box: OA 8978 To see more digitized collections visit: https://reaganlibrary.gov/archives/digital-library To see all Ronald Reagan Presidential Library inventories visit: https://reaganlibrary.gov/document-collection Contact a reference archivist at: [email protected] Citation Guidelines: https://reaganlibrary.gov/citing WITHDRAWAL SHEET Ronald Reagan Library Collection: CABINET AFFAIRS, WHITE HOUSE OFFICE OF: Archivist: kdb/kdb Records 8978 File Folder: Assassination Attempt on Pres. 3/30/81 OA 9620. Date: April 16, 1999 Str 10/14/11 DOCUMENT SUBJECT/TITLE DATE RESTRICTION NO. AND TYPE +. memo William Casey to James Baker, re events in Situation -4/10/81 P3,F3 Room on 3/30/81 (p 1, photocopied onto page with 4/20/81 note from Craig Fuller) 1p R 6/12/00 NLSF97-09812 #1 2. memo complete copy of the memo described under item 1 4/10/81 P3, F3 (w/notations), 2p R' 1. #2 RESTRICTION CODES Presidential Records Act [44 U.S.C. 2204(a)] Freedom of Information Act [5 U.S.C. 552(b)] P-1 National security classified information [(a)(1) of the PRA]. F-1 National security classified information [(b)(1) of the FOIA]. P-2 Relating to appointment to Federal office [(a)(2) of the PRAJ. F-2 Release could disclose internal personnel rules and practices of an agency [(b)(2) of P-3 Release would violate a Federal statute [(a)(3) of the PRA]. the FOIA]. P-4 Release would disclose trade secrets or confidential commercial or financial F-3 Release would violate a Federal statue [(b)(3) of the FOIA]. information [(a)(4) of the PRA]. F-4 Release would disclose trade secrets or confidential commercial or financial P-5 Release would disclose confidential advice between the President and his advisors, or information [(b)(4) of the FOIA]. between such advisors [(a)(5) of the PRA]. F-6 Release would constitute a clearly unwarranted invasion of personal privacy [(b)(6) of P-6 Release would constitute a clearly unwarranted invasion of personal privacy [(a)(6) of the FOIA]. the PRA]. F-7 Release would disclose information compiled for law enforcement purposes [(b)(7) of the FOIA]. C. Closed in accordance with restrictions contained in donor's deed of gift. F-8 Release would disclose information concerning the regulation of financial institutions [(b)(8) of the FOIA]. F-9 Release would disclose geological or geophysical information concerning wells [(b)(9) of the FOIA]. THE WHITE HOUSE For Craig Fuller WASHINGTON of Central Intelligence 4/20/81 gton. 20505 TO: Dick Darman FROM: CRAIG L. FULLER 10 April 1981 ( ) FYI ( ) Comment A. Baker III sistant DECLASSIFIED What happened to your report! I'd NLS F97-09812# be interested in Cabinet member BY MIn NARA, DATE 6/12/00 remarks. the on Room on not done yot! Landrafts or Post! the at 2:40 p.m. on Monday, 30 March, een shot at but he had not been om the scene of the shooting safely called and asked me to come over to the Situation Room at the White House == other men had been hurt. Almost immediately, Dick Allen the river and reach the Situation Room. There I learned that the President across right away. I left immediately. It took about twenty minutes to get had had been taken to George Washington Hospital. I learned also that Jim Brady policeman had been hit and were in the hospital. been hit in the head and that a Secret Service man and a Washington Secretary of Defense, Dick Allen, the Secretary of the Treasury, and the 2. When I arrived, the Secretary of State, the Attorney General, the Counsellor to the President were there. The Attorney General reported the assailant's name and said that he came from Evergreen, Colorado. I called John McMahon, CIA's Deputy Director for Operations, to ask that a name check of follow-up activities or reaction to the shooting that came in from be made on John W. Hinckley, Evergreen, Colorado, and asked that any indication forces around the world be phoned in to me in the Situation Room. We our informed sent a flash message worldwide asking for any information that might bear on the Secret Service that CIA had no information on Hinckley. In addition, CIA the assassination attempt. Responses were passed immediately to the Secret Service and FBI unevaluated. The Secretary of State was the senior Cabinet officer present and functioned as chairman and sought to maintain order in the discussion. This seemed to be by common consent. He and Jim Baker at at the hospital. the hospital were the contact points between the Cabinet and the developments 3. The Secretary of Defense consulted with those gathered in the Situation Room as to what should be done about putting our military forces on alert and took responsibility for any steps that were called for in that respect. Notification of the families of the victims, arranging for their For Craig Fuller The Director of Central Intelligence Washington, C 20505 10 April 1981 MEMORANDUM FOR: The Honorable James A. Baker III Chief of Staff and Assistant to the President F47098/2#2 FROM: William J. Casey Mon 6/12/00 SUBJECT: Events in the Situation Room on 30 March 1981 1. I was called out of a meeting at 2:40 p.m. on Monday, 30 March, to be informed that the President had been shot at but he had not been hit, and that he had been taken away from the scene of the shooting safely but that three other men had been hurt. Almost immediately, Dick Allen called and asked me to come over to the Situation Room at the White House right away. I left immediately. It took about twenty minutes to get across the river and reach the Situation Room. There I learned that the President had been taken to George Washington Hospital. I learned also that Jim Brady had been hit in the head and that a Secret Service man and a Washington policeman had been hit and were in the hospital. 2. When I arrived, the Secretary of State, the Attorney General, the Secretary of Defense, Dick Allen, the Secretary of the Treasury, and the Counsellor to the President were there. The Attorney General reported the assailant's name and said that he came from Evergreen, Colorado. I called John McMahon, CIA's Deputy Director for Operations, to ask that a name check be made on John W. Hinckley, Evergreen, Colorado, and asked that any indication of follow-up activities or reaction to the shooting that came in from our forces around the world be phoned in to me in the Situation Room. We informed the Secret Service that CIA had no information on Hinckley. In addition, CIA sent a flash message worldwide asking for any information that might bear on the assassination attempt. Responses were passed immediately to the Secret Service and FBI unevaluated. The Secretary of State was the senior Cabinet officer present and functioned as chairman and sought to maintain order in the discussion. This seemed to be by common consent. He and Jim Baker at the hospital were the contact points between the Cabinet and the developments at the hospital. 3. The Secretary of Defense consulted with those gathered in the Situation Room as to what should be done about putting our military forces on alert and took responsibility for any steps that were called for in that respect. Notification of the families of the victims, arranging for their ARTHUR J. GOLDBERG RESERVATION COPY WALLE R Charles Waller We Can't Be Crippled Abroad, Even for a Few Hours Thank God, President Reagan and We lack a comparable authority in not invoked, presumably because ity. But some cannot. Had the Soviets his men have been spared. We are, a foreign affairs crisis. the White House staff and cabinet of- invaded Poland while President Rea in light of our continuing opposition True, Vice President Bush has ficers conceived that the determina- gan was under general anesthesia or to hand gun control, a luckier nation been designated as our crisis man- tion of a temporary presidential under medication for some days than we deserve to be. ager, whatever that term means. But, disability would cause panic here thereafter, the unresolved question But, putting gun control aside, this designation contemplates a and abroad. is who, in the executive branch, there is a grave problem which re- president able to act, to give policy I disagree. It is simply inconceiv- would be authorized to order the ap- quires immediate attention. directives and to supervise their im- able that the president can exercise propriate response, on our own, or This problem is the absence of a plementation. In other words, a executive authority in a foreign af- better still, in concert with our al- carefully considered and articulated chief executive to whom the man- fairs crisis, such as the possibility of lies. foreign affairs command authority ager is subordinate and must ac- an imminent invasion in Poland, I am confident that contingency to function in the event of tempo- count.' while undergoing major surgery re- papers exist. But, since we cannot bel rary disability of a president. If the president is unable to quiring a general anesthetic and sure of the exact nature of the final We have such an authority with perform these functions, there is a sedative pain medication for some action by the Soviets and their War respect to the military. This author- lacuna in foreign policy decision days thereafter. saw Pact allies, our response must be ity, derived from the president's con- making. It would appear to me that such a tailored to what they may do./Time stitutional designation as True also, we have the 25th situation is more likely to arouse may be of the essence. And only a commander in chief of the armed Amendment to the Constitution. concern than the uncertainty of fully alert president or a simîlarly forces and the National Security Act This amendment, in substance, pro- who is in command and the credi- alert and expressly. delegated surro- of 1947, authorizes the president in vides that when a president, tempo- bility gap about the president's ca- gate is in a position to issue the nec- advance of an emergency to delegate rarily or permanently, is unable to pacity to make major decisions essary policy directions. authority over the military, when he discharge the powers and duties of under the given circumstances. We have, it would appear, ruled is unable to act, to the vice president, his office, the vice president and a- My apprehension, in this regard, out military intervention in Poland. the secretary of defense and to our majority of the Cabinet shall desig- surely is shared by the American But there are a variety of other mea- field commanders, in this order. nate the vice president to be acting people and by our allies and adver- sures in our non-military arsenal president. The amendment also saries alike. Whatever their views, some short-range, others long range makes provisions for the president they do not fail to understand the im- Whatever the measures, it is of ut Arthur Goldberg is former associ- to resume his office when he is able pact of a major operation. most importance that Soviet inter. ate justice of the Supreme Court, U.S. to do so. Almost all, governmental prob- vention, if it occurs, be met with an permanent representative to the This amendment could have been lems can, without serious immediate response. And if we are to United Nations, ambassador at large invoked in the terrible case of the consequences, await the president's and secretary of labor. shooting of President Reagan. It was recovery from a temporary disabil- See WE, A-14 The Washington Star Comment SUNDAY APRIL 12, 198 ARTHUR J. GOLDBERG WAIIE Charles Waller We Can't Be Crippled Abroad, Even for a Few Hours Thank God, President Reagan and We lack a comparable authority in not invoked, presumably because ity. But some cannot. Had the Soviets his men have been spared. We are, a foreign affairs crisis. the White House staff and cabinet of- invaded Poland while President Rea- in light of our continuing opposition True, Vice President Bush has ficers conceived that the determina- gan was under general anesthesia or to hand gun control, a luckier nation been designated as our crisis man- tion of a temporary presidential under medication for some days than we deserve to be. ager, whatever that term means. But, disability would cause panic here thereafter, the unresolved question But, putting gun control aside, this designation contemplates a and abroad. is who, in the executive branch, there is a grave problem which re- president able to act, to give policy I disagree. It is simply inconceiv- would be authorized to order the ap- quires immediate attention. directives and to supervise their im- able that the president can exercise propriate response, on our own, or This problem is the absence of a plementation. In other words, a executive authority in a foreign af- better still, in concert with our al- carefully considered and articulated chief executive to whom the man- fairs crisis, such as the possibility of lies. foreign affairs command authority ager is subordinate and must ac- an imminent invasion in Poland, I am confident that contingency to function in the event of tempo- count.' while undergoing major surgery re- papers exist. But, since we cannot be ΓaΓy disability of a president. If the president is unable to quiring a general anesthetic and sure of the exact nature of the final We have such an authority with perform these functions, there is a sedative pain medication for some action by the Soviets and their War- respect to the militarv. This author- lacuna in foreign policy decision days thereafter. saw Pact allies, our response must be The Washington Star Comment SUNDAY APRIL 1 ARTHUR J. GOLDBERG Charles Waller We Can't Be Crippled Abroad, Even for a Few Hours Thank God, President Reagan and We lack a comparable authority in not invoked, presumably because ity. But some cannot. Had the Soviets his men have been spared. We are, a foreign affairs crisis. the White House staff and cabinet of- invaded Poland while President Rea- in light of our continuing opposition True, Vice President Bush has ficers conceived that the determina- gan was under general anesthesia or to hand gun control, a luckier nation been designated as our crisis man- tion of a temporary presidential under medication for some days than we deserve to be. ager, whatever that term means. But, disability would cause panic here thereafter, the unresolved question But, putting gun control aside, this designation contemplates a and abroad. is who, in the executive branch, there is a grave problem which re- president able to act, to give policy I disagree. It is simply inconceiv- would be authorized to order the ap- quires immediate attention. directives and to supervise their im- able that the president can exercise propriate response, on our own. or This problem is the absence of a plementation. In other words, a executive authority in a foreign af- better still, in concert with our al- carefully considered and articulated chief executive to whom the man- fairs crisis, such as the possibility of lies. foreign affairs cominand authority ager is subordinate and must ac- an imminent invasion in Poland, I am confident that contingency to function in the event of tempo- count' while undergoing major surgery re- papers exist. But, since we cannot be rary disability of a president. If the president is unable to quiring a general anesthetic and sure of the exact nature of the final We have such an authority with perform these functions, there is a sedative pain medication for some action by the Soviets and their War- respect to the military. This author- lacuna in foreign policy decision days thereafter. saw Pact allies, our response must be ity, derived from the president's con- making. It would appear to me that such a tailored to what they may do., Time stitutional designation as True also, we have the 25th situation is more likely to arouse may be of the essence. And only a commander in chief of the armed Amendment to the Constitution. concern than the uncertainty of fully alert president or a similarly forces and the National Security Act This amendment, in substance, pro- who is in command and the credi- alert and expressly. delegated surro- of 1947, authorizes the president in vides that when a president, tempo- bility gap about the president's ca- gate is in a position to issue the nec- advance of an emergency to delegate rarily or permanently, is unable to pacity to make major decisions essary policy directions. authority over the military, when he discharge the powers and duties of under the given circumstances. We have, it would appear, ruled is unable to act, to the vice president, his office, the vice president and a My apprehension, in this regard, out military intervention in Poland., the secretary of defense and to our majority of the Cabinet shall desig- surely is shared by the American But there are a variety of other mea- field commanders, in this order. nate the vice president to be acting people and by our allies and adver- sures in our non-military arsenal, president. The amendment also saries alike. Whatever their views, some short-range, others long range. makes provisions for the president they do not fail to understand the im- Whatever the measures, it is of ut- Arthur Goldberg is former associ- to resume his office when he is able pact of a major operation. most importance that Soviet inter- ate justice of the Supreme Court, U.S. to do so. Almost all, governmental prob- vention, if it occurs, be met with an permanent representative to the This amendment could have been lems can,, without serious United Nations. ambassador at large immediate response. And if we are to invoked in the terrible case of the consequences, await the president's and secretary of labor. shooting of President Reagan. It was recovery from a temporary disabil- See WE, A-14 THE WASHINGTON STAR Sunday, April 12, 1981 4 SZEP cases. that of the Military Command We Can't Act Crippled, Authority and of the proposed For- eign Affairs Command Authority, some form of congressional consul- Even for a Few Hours tation or-review is essential to pre- vent overreaching or abuse. In the 25th Amendment a formal ited period during a president's tem- vote of Congress is required under Continued from A-11 ave the imperative concerted ac- porary disability. I venture to make certain circumstances. A less formal the following proposals: procedure, e.g., consultation with on by our allies, they must know . Presumably, we have made pro- the leadership of both parties. may FAT nd be consulted about what we pro- visions for military emergencies by well be the appropriate measure in CHANCE ose to do. Happily, President Reagan's dis- the Military Command Authority the case of the temporary disability Parenthetically, I can see no good of a president with respect to which bility seems under control and the reason why we, the public, should the amendment is not invoked. resident appears to be able to react ) whatever may appear in Poland not be given more details about how AFTER this will operate so that we can make Announced in Advance T elsewhere. But in light of our ex- REAGAN an informed judgment as to whether Further, it is essential for the sake erience in the recent past. realism AND the authority is adequate, inad- of public confidence that any ar- equires that we provide for the fu- equate or excessive to meet such rangement of this sort be made pub- BUSH Even if we are able to escape fur- emergencies. Of course, certain mili- Iic in advance of any foreign policy COMES ure. tary planning should remain classi- crisis occurring during a presiden- HAIG her assassination attempts. residents, like the rest of us, may fied. But we are entitled to know tial disability. And certainly, in light more than that the Military Com- of President Reagan's welcome re- e subject to disabilities requiring mand Authority runs from the presi- covery, it should not apply in pres- najor operations or treatment, with ttendant consequences. We have dent to the vice president. to the ent circumstances even if untoward nly to recall what happened to Pres- secretary of defense and ultimately events take place in Poland. Also, dent Eisenhower during his tenure. to our field commanders presum- the authorization of a Foreign Af- ably. although not stated, through fairs Command Authority should be We can muddle through. as we ow have done. Better still. we can the Joint Chiefs of Staff. as detailed and as public as possible. The Foreign Affairs Command Au- A Foreign Affairs Command Au- void some of the confusion which thority which I envisage and pro- thority publicly promulgated to ccurred at the White House upon eing advised of the horror of March pose would follow the same pattern, function during a future presiden- although in the case of foreign poli- tial temporary disability which is 0. And we can reassure our people The Sesson cy. the constitutional base is the conceived not to warrant invocation nd our allies and put our adversar- president's power to direct our for- of the 25th Amendment, it seems to the case of a transient but disablin es on notice that we have adopted me, would minimize confusion by a permanent disability preventing eign affairs. him from discharging his constitu- impairment. It is dangerous that ppropriate measures to enable us to The Foreign Affairs Command those in authority as to who is mind- ing the store and appreciably avoid tional duties and responsibilities for the event of and during such impai ope with military and foreign poli- Authority would run from the presi- ment, no such delegation is made t y emergencies in the event of a dent, to the vice president, the sec- panic here and abroad. a prolonged period of time. residential disability. retary of state and then other Finally, there is no possible justi- In these parlous times, the func- advance and public authorization ficati 1 for not resorting to the 25th tions of our chief executive should, ther through invocation of the 25 involved executive departments and ome Proposals of necessity, temporarily be del- Amendment or by some other appr the bureaucracy. Amenument where a president, as in Given the reluctance to invoke egated to his second in command in priate means. he 25th Amendment, even for a lim- It also seems to me that in both the case of President Wilson, suffers 14 THE WASHINGTON STAR Sunday, April 12, 1981 We Can't Act Crippled, cases, that of the Military Command SZEP Authority and of the proposed For- eign Affairs Command Authority, some form of congressional consul- Even for a Few Hours tation or, review is essential to pre- vent overreaching or abuse. In the 25th Amendment a formal Continued from A-11, ited period during a president's tem- vote of Congress is required under have the imperative concerted ac- porary disability, I venture to make certain circumstances. A less formal tion by our allies, they must know the following proposals: procedure, e.g., consultation with and be consulted about what we pro- Presumably, we have made pro- the leadership of both parties, may pose to do. visions for military emergencies by well be the appropriate measure in FAT Happily, President Reagan's dis, the Military Command Authority. the case of the temporary disability CHANCE ability seems under control and the Parenthetically, I can see no good of a president with respect to which president appears to be able to react reason why we, the public, should the amendment is not invoked. to whatever may appear in Poland not be given more details about how or elsewhere. But in light of our ex- this will operate so that we can make Announced in Advance AFTER perience in the recent past, realism an informed judgment as to whether Further, it is essential for the sake REAGAN requires that we provide for the fu- the authority is adequate, inad- of public confidence that any ar- AND ture. equate or excessive to meet such rangement of this sort be made pub- BUSH Even if we are able to escape fur- emergencies. Of course, certain mili- lic in advance of any foreign policy COMES ther assassination attempts, tary planning should remain classi- crisis occurring during a presiden- HAIG presidents, like the rest of us, may fied. But we are entitled to know tial disability. And certainly, in light be subject to disabilities requiring more than that the Military Com- of President Reagan's welcome re- major operations or treatment, with mand Authority runs from the presi- covery, it should not apply in pres- attendant consequences. We have dent to the vice president, to the ent circumstances even if untoward only to recall what happened to Pres- secretary of defense and ultimately events take place in Poland. Also, ident Eisenhower during tenure. to our field commanders - presum- the authorization of a Foreign Af- We can muddle through, as we ably, although not stated, through fairs Command Authority should be now have done. Better still. we can the Joint Chiefs of Staff. as detailed and as public as possible. avoid some of the confusion which The Foreign Affairs Command Au. A Foreign Affairs Command Au- occurred at the White House upon thority which I envisage and pro- thority publicly promulgated to being advised of the horror of March pose would follow the same pattern, function during a future presiden- 30. And we can reassure our people although in the case of foreign poli- tial temporary disability which is and our allies and put our adversar- cy, the constitutional base is the conceived not to warrant invocation The Boston Nobr ies on notice that we have adopted president's power to direct our for- of the 25th Amendment, it seems to eign affairs. me, would minimize confusion by a permanent disability preventing the case of a transient but disablin appropriate measures to enable us to ope with military and foreign poli- The Foreign Affairs Command those in authority as to who is mind- him from discharging his constitu- impairment. It is dangerous that cy emergencies in the event of a Authority would run from the presi- ing the store and appreciably avoid tional duties and responsibilities for the event of and during such impai presidential disability. dent, to the vice president, the sec- panic here and abroad. a prolonged period of time. ment, no such delegation is made retary of state and then other Finally, there is no possible justi- In these parlous times, the func- advance and public authorization Some Proposals involved executive departments and fication for not resorting to the 25th tions of our chief executive should, ther through invocation of the 25 Given the reluctance to invoke the bureaucracy. Amendment where à president, as in of necessity, temporarily be del- Amendment or by some other appr the 25th Amendment, even for a lim- It also seems to me that in both. the case of President Wilson, suffers egated to his second in command in priate means. THE WASHINGTON POST Sunday, April 5, 1981 The Day of the Jackal in Washington At the Hospital "Situation negative," the advance agent replied. At the shooting scene, agents had By Lou Cannon The quiet ended in the rapid fire of overwhelmed a young blond man later Washington Post Staff Writer a handgun and screams from the identified as John Warnock Hinckley It began as an ordinary spring day in crowd. Within nine seconds six shots Jr. They piled him into a police car Washington: light showers, the usual lines of had been fired in rapid succession at and took him away. tourists at the White House, a routine speech the presidential party. Before the limousine reached the by the president. One shot hit Secret Service agent hospital, nurses had cleared space in Then, gunfire. For six hours the nation Timothy J. McCarthy, who thrust the resuscitation bay for the shooting watched and wondered. Would the president himself between President Reagan victims. A first radio message has told live? Would he survive and be disabled? and the gunman, in the stomach. them there has been a shooting and Would the nation be plunged into constitu- One shot hit District police officer that "some men" have been hurt. A tional crisis? Thomas K. Delahanty in the neck. second message informed them that It was 2:24 p.m. Monday, March 31. Mi- One shot, although no one knew it one was the president of the United chael K. Deaver wasn't supposed to be at the immediately, bounced off the armored States. Washington Hilton. He was supposed to be limousine and hit Reagan in the chest, At 2:35 p.m. the limousine arrived back in the White House working on the penetrating his left lung. Yet another at George Washington. Reagan was hit a window in a building across the president's schedule. But it was a busy day feeling pain in his chest and was hav- street and fragmented. at the office for chief of staff James A. Baker ing difficulty breathing. As he got out And one shot, the shot that did the of the car, D.C. paramedic Roberto III, and Deaver, his deputy, had volunteered to go in his place with President Reagan most damage, struck White House Hernandez recognized the limousine. when he addressed the Building Trades press secretary Brady over the left On inaugural day he had been as- eye, penetrating his brain. Brady fell, signed to the ambulance that followed Council. with blood gushing from his head. An the new president around Washing- No one noticed the gunman before the advance man, Rick Ahearn, put a. ton. firing began. No one particularly saw him, or white handkerchief under Brady's "I literally froze," Hernandez said knew he was there. On the sidewalk outside head. It quickly turned red with afterward. "I didn't believe what I was the lower entrance to the Washington Hilton, blood. actually seeing. I noticed he looked very pale and he had an apprehensive a Secret Service agent gave the routine radio In a matter of seconds Parr had look about him The stare in his signal that all was clear. shoved Reagan into the limousine and eyes was like he was in a slight daze." It was 2:25 p.m. Deaver will never forget pulled the door shut, He commanded Reagan got out of the car. He what happened next. the driver, Drew Unrue, to pull away, walked to the emergency room, his "The president and I were walking out and the presidential limousine sped face drawn, Parr's arm around him. together," he recalls. "The press started ask- from the scene, A staff control car, Incredibly, no one had thought to ing their usual questions. I turned and with Deaver inside, followed. order a stretcher to be ready for him. When the president entered the emer- moved [James S.] Brady up because he was "You son-of-a-bitch, you broke my gency room, he feil to one knee. the press secretary. I took three steps, then rib," Reagan said to Parr inside the "I can't breathe," he said. the first shot went over my right shoulder. I limousine. He was joking, but he was For a moment the workers in the knew what it was. I ducked down, with the hurting from the blow. resuscitation bay were stunned. "Is help of a shove from a Washington police- Later in the week the president that who I think it is?" a nurse asked. man, who also was dropping to the ground. I would tell Deaver that he hadn't real- Then they sprang into action. Her- smelled the powder. I never saw the gun- ized he had been hit by a bullet but nandez removed Reagan's shoes, socks that he certainly knew he had been man." and pants while his partner Eric Sim- hit. Secret Service agent Jerry Parr, head of mons cut off his shirt. "It was a blow like I never felt," "All I could think of was Parkland," the presidential detail, never saw the gun- Reagan said. "It was like someone Deaver said, referring to the Dallas man, either. The gunman was shielded by hitting me with a hammer as hard as hospital where John F. Kennedy was the crowd. they could." taken. Secret Service agents had looked over this Parr, not knowing that the presi- dent had been shot, originally ordered But Deaver, a short, quiet, patient crowd, as they always do. It is not easy to spot a concealed gunman in a friendly crowd. the limousine to return to the White man who knows Reagan better than Thirty seconds before the president arrived House. But when he saw Reagan anyone on the White House staff and at the hotel, Parr had received a favorable coughing blood, the bright-red oxygen- was treated like a son by him, was ated blood that comes from the lung, busy with other matters. Cool and situation report. he and the president thought a rib collected, Deaver found a telephone "Rawhide follow to Rawhide advance," he had been broken by the protective bay outside the emergency ward and said, using the code word for the president. shove. Parr told Unrue to drive to called the White House. He reached "Situation report?" George Washington University Hospi- Margaret Tutwiler, the secretary to tal instead of the White House. He chief of staff Baker. -radioed the control car and told "Keep this line open, Margaret," he Deaver where he was going. said. "There's been a shooting, and the president's hurt. We don't think he was hit, but he may have broken a rib." -2- Gergen went to find White House At the White House counselor Edwin Mecse III, the presi- Outside the resuscitation bay, At the White House they already dent's top aide, who was with his dep- Deaver and aide David Fisher kept knew about the shooting. But they uty, Craig Fuller. They already knew. the telephone lines open to the White did not know much about what had Baker ran down to the Secret Service House. Deaver had Nancy Reagan happened or that the president had command post in the basement to called immediately. He also asked been shot. find out what had happened. It was Tutwiler to tell his secretary to call about 2:35 p.m., the time of Reagan's his wife, Carolyn, and tell her that he Baker had been working in his of- arrival at the hospital. was unharmed, but Deaver's secretary, fice through the morning. At 1 p.m. Shirley Moore, had already done SO. he went to the White House mess to At the Hotel Meanwhile, Brady and McCarthy eat his usual lunch: a tunafish salad had arrived at the hospital, and Dela- sandwich and buttermilk. Brady and Back at the Hilton, the ambulances hanty had been taken to Washington had borne away the wounded men, his deputy, Larry Speakes, were fin- Hospital Center. Brady looked bad ishing their lunch as Baker and Tut- leaving behind the remnants of the and his blood pressure was dangerous- wiler arrived. They exchanged pleas- shooting: an umbrella, a dropped briefcase, the bloody sidewalk grate ly high. To the paramedics, McCarthy looked best of all. antries, and Brady said he was going where Brady fell. "Are you still with us?" a fellow to the Hilton for Reagan's speech. Prosperi, knowing that the presi- The first word at the White House agent asked him. "Oh, yes," McCarthy dential limousine had started out for quickly replied. that something had gone wrong came the White House, mistakenly believed At 2:36 p.m. Mrs. Reagan arrived in a telephone call from David Pros- the president had arrived there, and at the hospital. She wanted to see her peri, an assistant press secretary. He so informed the press. One eyewitness, was at the scene where the shots were husband immediately, but was told by Ramon Flores, attempted to convince Deaver that she could not. When she fired, and he saw Brady go down. Prosperi rushed into the hotel and skeptical reporters that Reagan had did get to see him, he greeted her grabbed the first telephone he found. been hit. He shrugged his shoulders with a line that may become a classic: It was a charge phone, so he gave the when they did not believe him. "Honey, I forgot to duck." operator the White House press office At the Hospital number and billed the call to his At the White House home telephone. Within minutes at George Washing- At the White House, events moved "Get me Larry. It's an emergency," ton the resucitation area was crowded swiftly. Tutwiler had left the first he said into the telephone. with members of the trauma team White House line open for Deaver, Speakes was just coming out of a and Secret Service agents. As Dr. then she rounded up Baker, Meese, meeting with other White House aides Dennis O'Leary related later, a nurse Gergen, Speakes and communications in the Roosevelt Room on the auto- trying to take Reagan's blood pressure director Frank Ursomarso, who were mobile regulation package that is to could not hear through the stetho- in a hall beyond the Oval Office. She be announced this week. Betsy scope because of the din and had to told them Deaver was on the tele- Strong, a press aide, ran up and told take it by feeling the pulse in phone. him Prosperi was calling. He picked Reagan's arm. It was only about 75 - Baker went into his office and took up the phone of Kathy Ahern, low enough to signal that the presi- one phone. Mecse picked up the other Brady's secretary. dent was in danger of shock. phone on the same line. Baker was at "The president has been shot at and Brady has been hit," Prosperi Quickly, trauma team members in- his desk. Deaver told them that the serted an intravenous tube and began president had been shot. said. running fluid into the president's "Shit," said Meese. "Thanks," Speakes replied, and hung up. From the look on his face veins. They took blood samples to "Oh, Jesus," said Baker. measure the blood oxygen content and Both men moved swiftly to do what the others in the room knew it was a crisis. to match Reagan's blood for a trans- was necessary. They agreed that the "I don't know what it looked like, fusion. Meanwhile, they called for O- vice president had to be called, and but it hit pretty hard," Speakes said. negative blood, the type that can be that the Cabinet should assemble in Ahern began to weep. given to anyone. Reagan's blood type the White House Situation Room. is O-positive. Secretary of State Alexander M. White House staff director David R. Gergen was coming out of the Dr. Joseph M. Giardano, the sur- Haig Jr. had called, and Baker called geon who heads the trauma team, was him back. same meeting Speakes had attended. The first instinct of both was to walk among the first to respond to the "It's very important how we handle page, and he saw Reagan within five this world-wide," Haig told Baker, out on the colonade and watch the motorcade return, which they ex- minutes of his arrival. By then, the who agreed. pected momentarily. Instead, Speakes president's blood pressure had risen to Treasury Secretary Donald T. telephoned Jack Warner of the Secret 100, but he was coughing up blood, Regan was the first Cabinet officer to his' breathing was fast and labored, reach Baker's office. Treasury is the Service. Warner knew something had and the surgeons had discovered the boss of the Secret Service, and Regan happened, but did not have the de- slit-like wound under his left arm. had been told of the incident within tails. Gergen ran down the corridor to Giardano said that the likelihood of two minutes of its occurrence. Regan Baker's office with the news. He burst a collapsed lung and the danger that, was on a long distance call from Los into the office, almost knocking down Reagan might be bleeding from his Angeles when the call came, and he Tutwiler, who had her back against heart or a major blood vessel made it hung up and went immediately by car the door. necessary to insert a chest tube at across the street to the White House. once. -3- At the hospital, Deaver put White Meanwhile, Dr. Neofytos T. Tsan- Aaron said he could feel splintering House physician Daniel Ruge on the garis, the hospital's acting chief of of the seventh rib where the bullet open line, and Baker took notes on staff, had been summoned from a had nicked it and ricocheted into the what Ruge told him: "He [the presi- meeting by a brief announcement: chest. Outside the left lung, he found dent] has received a chest wound in "The president of the United States is a large blood clot, and, after he re- the left chest. He is in stable condi- in the emergency room." Tsangaris moved it, he could see where the bul- tion. The blood pressure and pulse is said he quickly realized that three let had entered the lung. Quickly, he okay. He is alert and fighting. Next separate operating rooms, one for each examined the heart and the major stop could be the operating room. You shooting victim, must be readied at vessels nearby. They were untouched. ought to get right over here." once with nurses, technicians and All the bleeding was coming from the Haig arrived. Later, at the State equipment. smaller vessels within the torn lung. Department, a spokesman announced It was now 3:20 p.m. and Reagan "We began to feel. around for the that Baker and Meese had left the was being prepared for surgery. He bullet and to our chagrin we could White House by the time Haig got had an oxygen mask over his face not find that bullet within the lung," there. It was an incorrect announce- when Baker saw him, but winked at he said later. Aaron ordered an X-ray ment. Regan, Baker and Tutwiler all his chief of staff. taken on the operating table. The bul- remember that Haig arrived just be- At 3:30 p.m., approximately 45 let was visible, embedded in a portion fore Baker and Meese left the office. minutes after he was been brought to of the left lung just behind the heart They talked briefly, and Meese and the hospital, he was wheeled to the and "flattened almost as thin as a Baker agreed that Haig would be the operating room. His bleeding had dime," he said. "contact point" at the White House slowed somewhat, and he had received At last Aaron felt the bullet and while they were at the hospital. No a transfusion of five units of blood. pulled it out. Then he removed some one said anything about anyone being "Please tell me you're Republicans," of the dead lung tissue, inserted a "in control." But there was a brief he joked to the masked surgical team drain into the bullet's track, and discussion of the 25th Amendment, surrounding him. closed the incisions. The president providing for presidential succession, After that, according to operating had been in the operating room for because no one knew how badly room technician Michael Borowski, 3½ hours, and apparently was out of Reagan was hurt. Bush would be back who helped with instruments during danger. With a breathing tube in his by the time they knew, everyone the operation, the president was quiet. throat, and still on a respirator, the agreed. "I saw Reagan looking around at ev- president was taken to the recovery " room. Meese told Tutwiler to get them a erybody busy doing their thing There had been anxious moments car. "I'll handle it," Regan said. He he recalled later. "I just kind of took_ directed an agent to get them a siren- his hand. He had sort of tears in his for Nancy Reagan during this opera- tion, moments she spent in a small equipped Secret Service car so they eyes He really had this look of private office the hospital made avail- could speed through traffic to the hos- appreciation on his face. That's what able to her and in the chapel, where pital. Speakes and Lyn Nofziger were really touched me." she met Sarah Brady, whose husband with Meese and Baker. The first part of the operation re- had been erroneously declared dead in Nofziger is a longtime Reagan aide quired a tiny incision below the navel. Into the incision Giordano inserted mid-afternoon reports on all three who proved a composed man in the television networks. day's crisis. He offered to help be- about a quart of salt solution to deter- For 53 minutes after the shooting cause "Brady is out of commission," mine whether any bullets had pene- not much was known at the White and everyone was happy to have him. trated the abdominal cavity and House press office. It wasn't until 3:18 He and Speakes are old adversaries, caused bleeding there. When sucked p.m. that communications director but they buried their differences on out again, the fluid was clear, indicat- Ursomarso stood on veteran press aide that bloody day. ing no abdominal injuries. Connie Gerrard's chair in the upper Haig, Regan, Gergen and intergov- A report was given to Baker and press office to tell a packed crowed of ernmental relations aide Rich Wil- Deaver outside the operating room. reporters that Reagan had been shot. liamson went down to the Situation Nancy Reagan was told the good Every television set was turned on Room in the White House basement. news, and tears came to her eyes. as staff and reporters watched replay At the hospital Deaver alternated Borowski said Reagan was then after replay. The room was full of his time between Nancy Reagan and turned on his right side and redraped people who work with Brady every the telephones. The grim mood was for the more major operation, the to- day, and the replays, particularly lightened on one occasion when a hos- racotomy. Assisted by Dr. Kathleen those in slow motion, made all who pital clerk with a green form in his Cheyney, Dr. Benjamin L. Aaron cut were present think that his chances hand ran around trying to get some a six-inch incision through the skin for survival were slight. information on the patient. "Who is parallel with the ribs, extending hori- Some aides wept for their fallen he?" the clerk wanted to know. zontally from below the left arm to- press secretary. It was pouring rain "R-e-a-g-a-n," Deaver spelled out. ward the center of the chest. Then he outside now, and correspondents who "You are kidding," the clerk said. used retractors to spread the ribs usually would have broadcast from "I'm not kidding," said Deaver. apart. the White House lawn stood on chairs in the briefing room to get above the heads of their milling colleagues and talked to fill air time. -4- At 3:37 p.m. Gergen appeared in phone line to Air Force Two, and Some knew they were talking for the crowded briefing room. Haig was guarded in his communica- posterity, but others didn't even no- "Good afternoon," he said. "This is tion. He also had a very poor connec- tice the recorders. What the men in to confirm the statements made at tion. the Situation Room wanted to know George Washington hospital that the "I think you should come directly were three things: how badly was the president was shot once in the left back to Washington," Haig said. president hit? Was the shooting a side this afternoon as he left the hotel. "There's been an incident." He also conspiracy or an individual act? His condition is stable. told Bush that he would be sending Would Brady survive? "A decision is now being made him a message over the coded Telex, While first reports from the hospi- whether or not to operate to remove machine that is the only secure chan- tal seemed to be positive, everyone in the bullet. The White House and the nel of communications between Air the Situation Room was aware that vice president are in communication. Force Two and the ground. the president was 70 years old and And the vice president is now en Bush hung up and turned to his faced major surgery. They were trying route to: Washington." aides. "We are going directly back to to prepare for every contingency. On Air Force Two Washington," he said. "I just spoke to Smith and Fielding briefed the Haig." It was a quarter of an hour Cabinet members on constitutional Going to Washington had not been later before he learned what had hap- succession and on the 25th Amend- George Bush's plan. On a day of rou- pened. ment, which spells out the procedures tine politicking, he had slipped into "Mr. Vice President, in the incident for the vice president's assuming office his blue, Eisenhower-style official you will have heard about by now, the in case of presidential disability. The flight jacket, buckled his seatbelt and president. was struck in the back," the review was brief, because the Cabinet settled back for a moment of relax- Telex from Haig said. "Medical au- members spent much of the time on ation as his plane took off from Fort thorities are deciding now whether or the telephone and, like millions of Worth at 2:41 p.m. EST for a short not to operate. Recommend you re- other Americans, before the television hop to Austin. turn to D.C. at earliest possible mo- set. Behind him was a speech to cattle- ment." Of those in the Situation Room, men and the dedication of the former Quickly, the word was passed Smith knew Reagan best. He is Hotel Texas as a national monument through the plane. House Majority Reagan's long-time attorney, a charter - it was the hotel where John F. Leader Jim Wright (D-Tex.) walked member of the "kitchen cabinet" and Kennedy had spent his last night be- into the front cabin, and Bush turned a close friend. He also has jurisdiction fore that fatal trip to Dallas. Ahead, to him and said, "Why in the world over the FBI, and was on the tele- in Austin, awaited an address to the would anybody shoot a man like Ron- phone immediately, checking on Texas Legislature and a news confer- ald Reagan?" Hinckley. Air Force Two did not have enough The readout from the FBI showed ence. Air Force Two was still climbing, a fuel on board to make it to Washing- that the suspect carried psychiatrists' couple of minutes later, when Edward ton nonstop, so the plane landed in cards in his pocket, which convinced Pollard, head of the vice president's Austin as scheduled, but only for refu- them that he probably was acting on Secret Service detail, took an urgent eling. Bush stayed on board, sipping his own. message from the Fort Worth office. on a diet cola and saying very little. Smith was outwardly calm, but his He was told of the assassination at- thoughts, like Deaver's, went back to At the White House tempt, and was told that the presi- the day John F. Kennedy was shot dent had not been hit. And he also At the White House, Cabinet mem- and the pall it cast over the nation. was informed, incorrectly, that two bers and other high White House offi- He was relieved to hear that Reagan Secret Service agents were down. Pol- cials assembled in the Situation was trying out one-liners on the doc- lard immediately relayed this message Room: Attorney General William tors, knowing, as he would say later, to Bush. French Smith, Defense Secretary "that this was a sign of normalcy." Bush nodded quietly and began Caspar W. Weinberger, Transporta- Weinberger had been told by his talking of the possibility of shortening tion Secretary Drew Lewis, National secretary that he was wanted at the his Austin stopover. The telephone Security Council staff director Richard Situation Room. At first, he couldn't line flashed again. This time it was V. Allen, domestic adviser Martin An- find a car, and thought of taking a Bush's press secretary, Peter Teeley, derson, CIA Director William J. taxi, but CIA Deputy Director Bobby with a message identical to the one Casey, counsel Fred Fielding. Hours Inman was visiting him, and he of- Pollard had given. later, Commerce Secretary Malcolm fered to take the defense secretary to The vice president's chief legislation the White House. Baldrige would arrive. aide, Robert V. Thompson, rushed There were so many people rushing When Weinberger arrived, Haig was back to the VIP section in mid-plane back and forth that Allen tried to making telephone calls on the only and announced to the assembled close the door to the Situation Room secure phone in the Situation Room. Bush aides and three Texas congress- to keep some of the staff members Weinberger stepped outside to call men that an attempt had been made out. Allen put a tape recorder on the Gen. David Jones, chairman of the on the president's life. table in the center of the room along Joint Chiefs of Staff. They discussed Up front, at 3:04 p.m., Haig tele- the combat-readiness of American with another that was already there. phoned Bush. There is no secure tele- forces, and Weinberger, after receiving unspecified classified information on a little white slip of paper, directed Jones to order "a little higher state of readiness," but one that was short of a full alert. -5- Other Cabinet members were mak- Haig was then asked who was mak- Afterward, both Haig and Weinber- ing similar determinations in their ing decisions for the government at ger would try to minimize the ex- areas of responsibility. the time, and responded, "Constitu- change, which lasted only a few Regan told Treasury Undersecre- tionally, gentlemen, you have the minutes. Haig responded to criticisms tary for Monetary Affairs Beryl president, the vice president and the Sprinkel to tell the Federal Reserve of his appearance by saying that he secretary of state, in that order, and was winded from running up the that the dollar should be supported should the president decide he wants stairs. on foreign exchange markets. After- to transfer the helm to the vice presi- "I may have been quivery, but I've ward, Regan described his action as "a dent, he will do so. He has not done been through 50 times worse than normal procedure that has been done that. As of now, I am in control here, that," he said. before" when some crisis threatens the in the White House, pending return of dollar's value. the vice president and in close touch At the Hospital The order meant that the Federal with him. If something came up, I Reserve bought dollars with other cur- would check with him, of course." At the hospital, Haig's impromptu rencies, though not in massive Haig's appearance astounded Baker briefing was one of the bad moments amounts. and Meese, who were watching at the for the watching White House aides. The attention of the officials in the hospital. And it flabbergasted Haig's An even worse one came in the press Situation Room then turned to the colleagues in the Situation Room, room when the television networks none of whom had been consulted incorrectly announced Brady's death. television set, which showed Speakes before he left on his self-appointed Some aides were furious. Others wept in the press room fending off ques- mission. silently as they continued to work. tions. He hadn't been told much, and "What's Al doing up there?" asked Baker, however, knew better than some of the questions concerned pos- Lewis. the networks. He had just had a re- sible emergency actions the nation Weinberger, returning from his tele- port that Brady was holding his own, was taking in the crisis. He was asked phone call to Jones, looked up and and he called the Situation Room and the key question of whether the U.S. saw Haig on the screen and asked, told them to disregard the report. military had been placed on higher "Why are they running that old tape Hospital interns who heard the re- readiness. of Al Haig?" ports asked the surgeon operating on "Not that I'm aware' of," Speakes It's not a tape, he was told. Haig's Brady if he hadn't heard that his pa- replied. up there. tient was dead. His response drew criticism from "He can't be, he was right here," At about 4:30 p.m. former president both Weinberger and Haig, but the said Weinberger, still disbelieving. As Richard M. Nixon called the hospital, secretary of state was especially agi- he watched, Haig told reporters in the asking for Nancy Reagan. She was tated. He said that "the next time briefing room that no change in mili- unable to come to the telephone, but someone opens their yap" they had tary alert procedures was contem- Baker did. better make sure that what they are plated. "Please convey my concern that I saying is true. Weinberger then left Weinberger knew that this was un- know is shared by all Americans," the room to make a telephone call. true because he had just ordered the Nixon said. "We've got a problem, and it's increased state of readiness, but had At 5:20 p.m. the bullet was re- Haig said, turning to Allen. "We done so without telling Haig. moved from the president and the had better go upstairs and get this When Haig returned to the briefing straightened out." room, Weinberger was waiting. In a medical reports were positive. Baker Haig and Allen double-timed up- dramatic moment of angry but con- called the Situation Room and told stairs to the press room, which the trolled confrontation, Weinberger de- them they didn't have to worry them- secretary of state, who had undergone manded that Haig explain why he selves any more with the 25th open-heart surgery, later thought had said what he had in the briefing Amendment. might have accounted for-his subse- room. The two men kept their voices Meese called the vice president, quent shaky appearance on television. down, but their differences were clear whose plane was still an hour out of He reached the briefing podium at and sharp. Despite Haig's announce- Washington. 4:14 p.m. ment, Weinberger told him, he had Cradling the phone in his cabin In a voice cracking with emotion, he increased the readiness of American after he received the news, Bush told the nation and the world: "I just military forces. turned to his aides and said, "The wanted to touch upon a few matters "That's just what I said we weren't bullet's been removed. The operation associated with today's tragedy. First, doing," Haig said. was a success. The president is fine." as you know, we are in close touch "I didn't know you were going up It was now agreed at the hospital with the vice president, who is return- there," Weinberger replied, adding that the president's top aides should ing to Washington We have in- that he didn't think it "was appropri- split up. And it was also agreed that formed our friends abroad of the situ- ate" for Haig to be going before the any further briefings on the presi- ation, the president's condition, as we television cameras in the manner he dent's condition should be by the doc- know it [is] stable, now undergoing had done. For good measure, he also tors, even though this meant keeping surgery. And there are absolutely no said that Haig had misstated the the press waiting for another hour. alert measures at this time that we're order of presidential succession, Deaver and Nofziger, whose experi- contemplating." prompting Haig to respond: "You ence was an asset in White House should read the Constitution." press relations, remained at the hospi- tal, where Nofziger related the first of the Reagan jokes in surgery. Meese 6 went to the vice president's residence "Hi, Nancy," said Mrs. Brady, in a to brief Bush upon his arrival. manner that was strikingly composed, Meese met Bush at the residence, "We are just praying for both of and together they rode in an armored them." limousine back to the White House. Nofziger remained at the hospital to Meese had sent a helicopter for the brief reporters on Brady. At 9:30 p.m. vice president to Andrews Air Force he gave the first relatively optimistic Base, and a Bush aide had suggested report on Brady's condition. that the chopper fly directly to the White House. At 8:50 p.m. the president, with the "No, I don't want to do that," Bush anesthesia worn off, scribbled a note said. "Only the president flies onto the to his doctors in the recovery room. South Lawn." "All in all, I'd rather be in Philadel- It was 7 p.m. when Bush arrived in phia," it said, in the words of a fa- the Situation Room. In rapid-fire mous movie line by W.C. Fields. order Allen ticked off an agenda that Everyone laughed. When the mes- had been discussed previously: the sage was relayed to the Situation president's health, an update on the Room, Smith said, "I know he's going world intelligence situation, the status to be all right." of U.S. military forces, the status of At 3 a.m. Tuesday, the tubes in what the press and public had been Reagan's mouth were removed. The told, the status of information given president's first words were about his privately to members of Congress, the assailant. outlines of the statement which had "Boy, what's his beef?" Reagan been drafted for Bush, the question of asked. whether it was appropriate for Bush to visit Reagan at the hospital, infor- mation about Mrs. Reagan and the family, the cancellation of Bush's planned trip to Geneva and an update on the next day's schedule, which Bush would fulfill. At 7:30 p.m., with Brady still fighting for his life, Dr. Dennis O'Leary, clinical dean of George Washington, briefed the press. At 8:45 p.m., Meese, Baker and Weinberger met in Baker's office for a drink and a discussion of the next day. At about this time, Nancy Reagan left the hospital with their son, Ron, and his wife, Doria. In a corridor, she encountered the parents of the wounded Secret Service agent, and said gratefully that their son had saved her husband's life. McCarthy's father sobbed. Then, on the ground floor, she met Brady's mother, Doro- thy. American Nightmare And yet it goes on, and on, and on Why? many more Americans received the news and switched channels -Robert F. Kennedy on the murder of to something else, once the initial vertigo wore off and the medical Martin Luther King, 1968 bulletins turned favorable. "Nobody was shocked," said Frank Mankiewicz, the old Kennedy hand who now heads National Suddenly, like a nightmare in instant replay, it was going on Public Radio. "Suddenly, it goes with the territory. Everybody again: the faceless, rootless loner with a pistol and a lunatic mission knows what presidents do: they run for office, they push bills washed up within shooting distance of the American Presidency through Congress, they make speeches-and they get shot at." and the American dream. Yet again, television screens burned The swift return to what Reagan might call normalcy was with the sickening imagery of assassination-Ronald Reagan walk- due at least as much to his own iron-horse example, shaking ing and waving through a misty Washington rain, a Saturday- off his wounds and his post-op pain as if he were 50 instead night special pop-popping bullets out of a crowd, the bodies of of 70 and chafing for his return to the White House as early White House press secretary James Brady and two lawmen blown as this week. "We could all say, 'Boy, that was a close one'," hurt and bleeding to the sidewalk, the Secret Service slamming said Jack Casey, a Detroit political consultant. "The President a stunned and wounded President into his limousine and racing signaled to us that life goes on." For a day likely to live as against death to a hospital. The news this time was good for long as his Presidency, he was the Duke defending the Alamo, Reagan and the others, and the omens for their recovery were Teddy Roosevelt taking a slug in the chest en route to a speech favorable. The most grievous wound of all was struck to the and waving away help until he had finished. His approval rating soul of a nation-the discovery that its public life is not yet in an ABC News/Washington Post poll bounced 11 points, over- safe from the fantasies of madmen or the shadow of the gun. night, to 73 per cent. "General Patton or George Gipp couldn't 'I Forgot to Duck': Whatever saving grace could be found have done it better," a Pittsburgh political scientist said. "He'll in the carnage on T Street owed mainly to Reagan himself, grinning have an image of an almost mythic hero about him now." like the Sundance Kid into the face of death, and to the ex- He will need those resources and more in the weeks ahead, traordinary resilience of the government he had inherited only running the government from a sickbed through a particu- 70 days before. The President walked into larly difficult passage. An Administration George Washington University Hospital on accustomed to running on delegated au- his own with his blood bozing away, an Once again, a loner with thority seemed to tick on nicely enough undetonated explosive bullet in his chest without him. But the crisis in Poland was and his fighting spirit very much intact. a pistol fires on a heating dangerously near to what Rea- "I forgot to duck," he kidded going into two hours of surgery. "All in all, I'd rath- President-and once gan's men considered the flash point (page 62), with the President still in the hospi- er be in Philadelphia," he kidded again coming out. His sang-froid spread to his again a nation stands tal and his Secretary of State, Alexander Haig, freshly bruised by his rattled be- colleagues, gathered in the White House Situation Room to install Vice President in the shadow of the gun. havior in the first hours after the shooting. The Reagan economic package, moreover, George Bush as acting President had the was at a delicate moment of gestation. The need arisen. It did not. Reagan resumed some semblance of com- Senate voted during the week to cut the budget deeper, by $2.8 mand within eighteen hours-and the government, in the insistent billion, than Reagan had asked, and the Urban League's Jordan word of the White House, "did not skip a beat." -himself scarred by sniper fire-pronounced it "no time to Yet the mere fact of the attentat by an overprivileged under- argue with a President." "Maybe the congressmen will feel sor- achiever named John W. Hinckley Jr. was evidence enough that ry for me and pass my tax bill," Reagan told a visitor; still, the eighteen-year death trip begun with the assassination of John he was champing to get back to work lest his program falter F. Kennedy cannot yet be counted over. Hinckley, like most without him. of his forebears in the American past, was the agent of no discernible The Wrong Track: The less tangible danger was that John cause larger than his own dementia-a Valium-dulled stew of Hinckley had shot up more than a President and his retinue- rock songs, Nazi scriptures and an unrequited passion for the that his .22-caliber Röhm RG-14 had wounded the American teen-age movie star Jodie Foster. But he is as well the child spirit as well at a moment when it had seemed so promisingly of the bloodiest generation in the history of America's public on the mend. In surveys by Reagan's polltaker Richard Wirthlin, life and popular culture. JFK fell into the bull's-eye when Hinckley public support for the view that the nation has somehow "gotten was 8, Malcolm X when he was 9, King when he was 12, Bobby off on the wrong track" had dwindled sharply, from 77 per cent when he was 13, George Wallace when he was 16, Gerald Ford last June to 47 per cent only a fortnight ago. But the attempt when he was 20, Vernon Jordan and John Lennon when he was on Reagan's life brought home how fragile that spirit is and 25. He saved cuttings on some of them, and on their assailants, how resigned Americans have become to periodic armed assaults and read them to mean that murdering Reagan would be re- on it. It has become a given that the open society cannot surely garded-even honored-as a "historical deed." identify the dangerous men and women in its midst, or keep He was wrong, of course; the disturbing lesson of the attempt them from moving about at will, or even prevent them from on Reagan was not that Americans condone or encourage public buying weapons meant only for murder. With Reagan's wounding, violence but that they have grown numb to it. Hinckley did have Congress rang with impassioned cries for tightened gun control- his admirers in isolated pockets-the seventh-graders in Tulsa and defeated whispers that, however popular, it will not pass. who cheered this TV shooting as they had J. R.'s on "Dallas" To do nothing at all is to surrender to the possibility that a year ago and the occasional callers to radio phone-in shows the attempt on Reagan was not the last-that the shadow of asserting that Reagan got what he deserved. What was more the gun has become a deadly fact of American life. "Does anybody disquieting was the widespread that's-life acquiescence with which know what the guy's beef was?" Reagan mused, puzzling with the rest of the nation over the scrambled shards of John Hinckley's Instant replay: A pistol spat bullets, a stunned and wounded Presi- life. The real nightmare for America was that it didn't matter- dent was slammed into his car-and, beyond a line of fallen that any crowd anywhere may conceal a tuned-out loser with bodies, lawmen pinned Hinckley to the wall a pistol in his pocket and a grievance to avenge in blood. © Sebastiao Salgado Jr.-Magnum PETER GOLDMAN NEWSWEEK/APRIL 13, 1981 29 SPECIAL REPORT Reagan's Close Call The cylinder spun, the counselor Edwin Meese. Richard Allen, the to the Washington Hilton Hotel for a speech hammer clicked and the national-security adviser, went over the to 3,500 AFL-CIO union delegates. The little, snub-nosed revolver sprayed its chaos. morning cables. Then his top Congressional two politicians, self-made men of Irish roots Michael Deaver, deputy White House chief lobbyist, Max Friedersdorf, gave him the and humor, spent the five-minute drive of staff, cringed like a man who had just morning line on Congress. The rest of the reminiscing about the 1980 New Jersey pri- felt death whistle past his neck. Press sec- day looked to contain nothing more ex- mary, in which Donovan had played a cru- retary James Brady pitched face down on citing than a meeting with David Rocke- cial role for Reagan. Donovan told the the sidewalk, blood trickling through a feller of Chase Manhattan Bank and dinner President an old New Jersey joke about grating. Policeman Thomas Delahanty with a few Cabinet officers. a local pol demoted to superintendent of spun around and then collapsed, a bullet Two blocks away, Hinckley got up, Municipal Weights and Measures. After in his neck, his hat flying through the air. dressed and left the hotel. Outside, it was his first day, reporters asked him, "Sir, how One slug caught Secret Service agent Timo- raining. Hinckley went to Kay's Sandwich many ounces in a pound?" "Hey," he pro- thy McCarthy in the chest, lifting and drop- Shoppe down the street from the Old Ex- tested. "Give a guy a chance to learn his ping him in a limp bundle on the pavement. ecutive Office Building, sat on a stool and duties." The President's limousine parked Another punched a tiny hole in the left began to eat his breakfast. Back at room outside the hotel's VIP entrance and Rea- side of the President of the United States, 312, the maid came in. She found Hinck- gan strode in. He worked a reception line, who was pushed into his car by agent huddled with Donovan, Deaver and Jerry Parr and sped away so fast that Brady in a VIP "holding room." Then at first even Ronald Reagan didn't know he walked into the ballroom and gave he had been shot. a conventional little speech that ranged from his budget cuts to the work ethic The day before the shooting, 25-year- to violent crime. old John Warnock Hinckley Jr., a child Fidgets: Hinckley got ready to make of the right gone wrong, arrived at the his move. Sometime after 1:15, when Greyhound Bus Terminal in Washing- a room maid knocked and found him ton-just five long blocks from the still in his room, he set off for the Wash- White House. For a few moments ington Hilton. When he arrived, he Hinckley leaned on a pole in the ter- took up a position in front of the curv- minal; then he sat down in a blue plastic ing stone wall that runs from the VIP chair: At about 12:15 p.m. he got into entrance. "He was very fidgety, agitat- line at the terminal's Burger King. "A ed," recalled Mike Dodson, a Pinkerton Whopper, cheese, no onions, and an or- man working in the Agency for Inter- der of onion rings," he snapped at wait- national Development across the street ress Linda Ross, slamming a $5 bill who noticed Hinckley as he waited for down on the counter. When the waitress the President to emerge from the hotel. asked if the order was to go, he snarled, Reporters and cameramen, also waiting "I said it was for here." He grabbed for Reagan, took up stations behind a his change and tray, retreated to a far red-velvet rope. The Secret Service did corner and wolfed down the food. At not screen the press crowd despite the 1 p.m. he made his way to the Park fact that bystanders had made their way Central Hotel on Eighteenth Street, two into it. A police lieutenant reportedly blocks from the White House and less John Ficara-Newsweek studied Hinckley for a while-but then than one block from Secret Service head- Hinckley under arrest: A 'historical deed' for love looked away. quarters. He paid $42 for one night's The leaky security upset Reagan's rent on room 312, which had twin beds, ley's clothes packed neatly in a suitcase, White House advance men. Rocky Kuonen ivory wallpaper, a brown carpet and a color a little travel alarm clock and a TV guide- pulled out a piece of paper and scribbled TV. He went out again, then hunkered little more. Not long afterward, Hinckley a diagram, reminding himself to sanitize down for the night-and his grim appoint- returned. He sat down to compose a love the press cordon of bystanders before Rea- ment the next day with Ronald Reagan. letter to someone he had never met: Jodie gan's next public stop. The precaution came While Hinckley cruised the porn district Foster, an 18-year-old movie starlet who too late. At 2:25 the President emerged four blocks from the White House, the played a teen-age prostitute in the 1976 from the VIP entrance into a misty rain. President was spending a quiet evening in film "Taxi Driver" (box, page 35). "There For convenience, his limousine was not the family quarters at the White House. is a definite possibility that I will be killed parked directly in front of the entrance but Next morning he got up, showered, put in my attempt to get Reagan," he wrote. 25 feet away so the motorcade could avoid on a blue suit and tucked a white hand- "Jodie, I'm asking you to please look into the hotel's curving driveway and a circu- kerchief neatly in his pocket. At 8:45 he your heart and at least give me the chance itous exit as it pulled away. entered the Oval Office for the day's first with this historical deed to gain your re- As the Presidential party came out, briefing with his top aides-White House spect and love." The signature was equal- Brady and Deaver swung left, headed for chief of staff James Baker, deputy chief ly inflamed: "I love you forever-John the staff car. Then Reagan stepped forward. of staff Michael Deaver and White House Hinckley." Hoping to get in one quick question, Mi- The letter was dated 12:45 p.m. At 1:30, chael Putzel, an AP reporter, shouted, "Mr. Nancy and a convalescing President: 'Hon- Secretary of Labor Raymond Donovan ar- President, Mr. President." The President ey, I forgot to duck' rived at the White House to escort Reagan smiled and raised his left arm in a cheery NEWSWEEK/APRIL 13, 1981 31 MAIN ENTRANCE McCatthy WASHINGTO. HILTONHOTE The President and his aides emerge from hotel and walk toward waiting cars. VIP DOOR 3 Secret Service agent Parr rushes toward Reagan, pushing him into the car. Michael Evans-The White House Moments before the shooting: The gunman is blocked from view by Officer Delahanty wave. At that moment, Hinckley whipped follow-up limousine. "Rawhide" return- eight or nine people leaping on this one out his gun, dropped to a crouch, took ing to "Crown'," he added, signaling that guy," said Dan Coffey, a mortgage agent. up a cop's professional, double-hand grip Reagan was on his way back to the White "It seemed like forever before they got him and opened fire. Reagan froze and went House. "Rawhide not hurt, repeat, not under control." After several minutes of pale. "It was like looking at a person who hurt," Parr said a few seconds later. In struggling, the officers clapped handcuffs has seen death reflected in his eyes," said the President's car, Reagan felt his side on Hinckley, pulled his coat up over his Mickey Crowe, 24, a trembling demonstra- gingerly. He was having trouble breathing. head as a makeshift straitjacket and hustled tor who had come to protest Reagan's pro- "It felt like a hammer hit me," Reagan him off to metropolitan police headquar- nuclear-energy stance. "AllI can remember later described the sensation. He began ters. Three ambulances arrived and hauled is his expression. It was like a guy saying: to cough up red blood and agent Parr away Brady, Delahanty and McCarthy. 'I'm in a moment of helplessness'." recognized it as oxygenated blood from Looking at the bloody bandages left on Shield: Within two seconds, Hinckley the lungs. He directed the driver to change the sidewalk, Garnet Chapin, 32, a Reagan emptied his gun, firing six shots in all. The course. Grabbing the car radio, Parr said advance man during the 1980 campaign little revolver made a deceptively innocent "Horsepower." Parr. Going to George who was in town to apply for a job at the popping sound. "Firecrackers," thought Washington University Hospital. Notify Interior Department, said with a groan, Kuonen, who had seen heavier fire in Viet- hospital Rawhide en route." "I know it's impossible to completely pro- nam. At the first pop, Parr, 50, head of From a window in a building across the tect him I was with him from Philly the White House Secret Service detail, street from the Washington Hilton, Wilma to Flint. Now I'm in Washington and I reached forward and grabbed the startled Criviski watched as the President's motor- see this." Tears welled in his eyes. "Damn, President. Doubling Reagan over to reduce cade screeched away, leaving the bodies damn," he cursed softly. his target profile, Parr then hunched over of three men on the ground. Rushing to 'Code Room': Within a few minutes the him as a human shield and slammed him a front office, she grabbed a phone, dialed President's motorcade screamed into the to the floor of the limousine. Even so, one 911 and cried to the emergency dispatcher: emergency entrance of George Washington of Hinckley's shots, caroming off the car's "We need an ambulance at the Washington University Hospital, twelve blocks from the armor, tore a hole in Reagan's suit, pierced Hilton Hotel; people have been shot in the Washington Hilton Hotel. As two Secret his body, traveled several inches down his street." Brady was face down, bleeding into Service agents hovered close by, Reagan side, bounced off a rib, punctured his left a steel grating and tended to by a Secret got out, walked about 15 yards to the emer- lung and came to rest just 3 inches from Service agent who laid his gun to rest next gency room, then staggered and was his heart. He felt nothing at first. "The to Brady's wounded head. Delahanty, a grabbed by the agents. "His eyes rolled car pulled out with the President looking policeman who normally works a different upward and his knees started to buckle," back," said William Middleton, an archi- beat but was assigned to Reagan because said Roberto Hernandez, 26, a paramedic. tect who was standing nearby. "I think his guard dog Kirk was sick that day, also "I thought he was having a heart attack. it was just the people standing in front of lay on the ground groaning in agony. Agent I thought we were losing him." Hernandez him that saved him." McCarthy lay silent. took the President by the feet, and the As the President's motorcade roared The smell of burnt powder filled the air. agents hoisted him gently under the arms down Connecticut Avenue, the radio Alfred Antonucci, 68, a burly, 5-foot 2- and carried him-faint but still conscious— ("Horsepower") in room W-16, the Secret inch union representative from Cleveland, to the "code room," a 10- by 20-foot space Service command post at the White House, tackled Hinckley. Police, hotel security where the worst emergency cases are treat- crackled to life. "Shots fired," reported guards and Secret Service men brandishing ed. "Let's get some oxygen on him," yelled an agent in "Halfback," the President's their weapons also piled on. "There were a doctor as the hospital's trauma team 32 NEWSWEEK/APRIL 13, 1981 THE CARNAGE ON T STREET SPECIAL REPORT 2 Gunman, waiting with reporters, fires at the President. McCarthy Brady STAFF CAR Delahanty SECRET SERVICE Reagan CAR Deaver 4 Brady, Delahanty and McCarthy are hit directly. Reagan is struck by a bullet ricocheting off the limousine. PRESIDENTIAL LIMOUSINE lb Ohisson-NEwsweek cal-care tower" of the Washington Hospital Center.) McCarthy was lying on his side, swung into action (page 45). Hernandez clutching his abdomen. "Are you still with leaned over Reagan and whispered "They'll us?" asked a colleague. "Oh yeah, I'm still take care of you, Mr. President." with you," McCarthy said with a grimace. Another ambulance wailed up to the In Chicago, McCarthy's mother and sister emergency room and Brady was wheeled flicked on their TV, saw the first tapes of into the room next to Reagan. A curtain the shooting, and wept. When Hinckley was drawn between them. A few seconds began shooting, McCarthy had stepped into later a third ambulance pulled up with Mc- the line of fire, perhaps saving Reagan's Carthy. (Delahanty was taken to the "criti- life. "He knew the job had risks," said his Six shots: Parr shoves Reagan into limo, McCarthy is hit and Deaver (below) ducks Dirck Halstead Photos by Sheldon Fielman (cameraman)-NBC TV News Dirck Halstead © Sebastiao Salgado r.-Magnum After the President's escape: Uzi-toting agent guards Hinckley as others attend Brady Evidence: An agent holds the attacker's gun father, Norman, a Chicago cop. "He knew gunned down; Brady's wound was to the "He's all right, he's all right," she cried the dangers." brain. Suddenly, Deaver gasped. "Oh, gosh, as she jumped from her car and sprinted Meanwhile, from the Washington Hilton here they come," he said, as Brady was to the emergency room. A Secret Service lobby, David Prosperi, 27, a White House wheeled by on a stretcher. "It doesn't look agent told her otherwise. "He's taken a press aide left behind by the retreating good for Jim," Deaver said quietly. bullet-but he's all right," the agent said. Presidential motorcade, flashed the word Baker's immediate problem was to de- "Honey, I forgot to duck," Reagan told of the shooting to the White House. Mis- termine whether Reagan had been inca- her. She leaned over and kissed him. As takenly, he told deputy press secretary pacitated-and whether to transfer Presi- the President's bed was wheeled into the Larry Speakes that Reagan had not been dential power to Vice President George operating room, the doctors gently hit. Speakes bolted into the hallway outside Bush under the terms of the 25th Amend- stopped the First Lady from entering. the press office, collared Presidential as- ment. Baker asked Deaver to put Dr. Daniel Looking up, Reagan caught a glimpse of sistant David Gergen and delivered the Ruge, Reagan's personal physician, on the Meese, Deaver and Baker. "Who's mind- news of the shooting. "Oh my God," Ger- phone. Ruge reported that the President ing the store?" he said with a wink as gen thought. "Not again." The two men had a small bullet puncture in his chest the orderlies wheeled him into surgery. raced along the colonnade by the Rose Gar- and had lost 3 or 4 pints of blood; he called Looking up at the surgeons, Reagan den to the South Lawn. Seeing that Rea- his condition "stable." Just then, one of quipped, "I hope you're all Republicans." gan's motorcade had failed to return, they Baker's other phones rang. Secretary of "Today, everyone's a Republican," one ran into Baker's West Wing office. "Do State Alexander Haig was on the line. Baker doctor rejoined. you know what's happened?" Gergen blurt- told him Reagan had been hit. "You know Rumors: Reassured by the preliminary ed out. "Somebody's tried to shoot the it's important how we handle this as far guess of the doctors that Reagan's prog- President-and Brady's been hit." as the world is concerned," Haig said. "I nosis was good, Baker, Deaver and Meese 'Oh, Gosh': Baker made a dash for the quite agree with you," Baker replied. Before saw no immediate need to invoke the 25th Secret Service command post. When Meese taking any action, however, Baker and Amendment. But for a time it looked like was alerted, he "went totally white," said Meese wanted to go to the hospital. At no one was minding the store very coher- an aide. A few minutes later Deaver called Deaver's suggestion, the two worried aides ently. Back at the White House, the from the hospital with a garbled report: went first to the White House family quar- stripped-down staff wallowed in rumors. Brady and a Secret Service agent had been ters to persuade Nancy Reagan not to go It took nearly an hour before White House shot, but the President had only a bruised to the hospital. "A lot of people had been communications director Frank Ursomar rib. Scribbling a "Do not hang up" sign shot: there was a lot of blood," said an so announced that Reagan had been shot. on a sheet of paper, White House aides aide. "It was his view that it wasn't the There was weeping when all three networks attached it to the phone and kept the line best place for her to be." broadcast a false report that Brady had open to the hospital. (It took 40 minutes They were too late. Returning from a died. Speakes finally emerged and crushed to install secure White House communi- lunch in Georgetown, the First Lady had the rumor. "There was a lack of precise cations to the hospital.) Five minutes later learned of the shooting from her chief of information to say the least," says Treasury Deaver was back with a grimmer report: staff and a Secret Service agent. She im- Secretary Donald Regan, the first Cabinet "It looks like the President has been mediately rushed to the hospital. She did officer to arrive on scene. nicked," he said; a D.C. cop had been not know that her husband had been shot. The Administration began to pull itself 34 NEWSWEEK/APRIL 13, 1981 SPECIAL REPORT together. Haig, Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger, Attorney General William French Smith and CIA chief William Casey all rushed to the White House. The Presi- dent's men gathered in the basement Sit- uation Room (code name: Cement Mixer). Meese and Baker left word before they went to the hospital that Haig, as the senior Cabi- net officer, should run the Situation Room, overseeing such duties as assembling the entire Cabinet should it be necessary to invoke the 25th Amendment later. Says Baker, "We did everything we had to do to take action if action was required." Alert: Even so, Haig managed to stum- ble into one stinging set of nettles. As he was sitting in the Situation Room, he glanced up at the television and heard a reporter ask deputy press secretary Speakes whether U.S. military forces had been put on alert. "Not that I'm aware," Speakes replied. Haig feared that the press might misinterpret the vague report. "Come on, come with me," he told na- tional-security adviser Allen. Without telling anyone where he was going, Haig Dirck Halstead took Allen in. tow, raced up a flight of An ambulance for Brady: Miraculous progress after the networks pronounced him dead stairs and stalked into the White House press room. berger looked up absently at the television State in that order, and should the President For a take-charge leader, Haig made a set and asked, "What's that old tape of decide he wants to transfer the helm to rather clumsy entrance. Unannounced, Al running for?" He had no idea that Haig the Vice President, he will do so. I am sweating heavily from the run upstairs, his was upstairs on live TV. in control here in the White House pending voice quavering, he announced that the ap- But Haig got his facts wrong-and over- the return of the Vice President. If some- propriate Cabinet officials were in the Sit- stepped his authority. When a reporter thing came up, I would check with him, uation Room, that Vice President Bush was asked who was making the decisions for of course." aware of the crisis, that U.S. allies had been the White House he replied: "Constitution- In fact, the Speaker of the House and notified as well and that no military alert ally, gentlemen, you have the President, the President Pro Tempore of the Senate was on. Down in the Situation Room, Wein- the Vice President and the Secretary of follow the President and Vice President Hinckley's Last Love Letter Dear Jodie: sation, however full of ridicule it may There is a definite possibility that I be. At least you know that I'll always will be killed in my attempt to get Reagan. love you. It is for this very reason that I am writing Jodie, I would abandon this idea of you this letter now. getting Reagan in a second if I could As you well know by now, I love you only win your heart and live out the rest very much. The past seven months I have of my life with you, whether it be in left you dozens of poems, letters and mes- total obscurity or whatever. I will admit sages in the faint hope you would develop to you that the reason I'm going ahead an interest in me. with this attempt now is because I just Although we talked on the phone a cannot wait any longer to impress you. couple of times, I never had the nerve I've got to do something now to make to simply approach you and introduce you understand in no uncertain terms myself. Besides my shyness, I honestly that I am doing all of this for your sake. did not wish to bother you I know By sacrificing my freedom and possibry the many messages left at your door and my life I hope to change your mind about in your mailbox were a nuisance, but I me. This letter is being written an hour felt it was the most painless way for me before I leave for the Hilton Hotel. to express my love to you. Jodie, I'm asking you to please look I feel very good about the fact you into your heart and at least give me the at least know my name and how I feel chance with this historical deed to gain about you. And by hanging around your your respect and love. dormitory I've come to realize that I'm I love you forever. Steve Schapiro-Transworid the topic of more than a little conver- (signed) John Hinckley Foster as a prostitute in 'Taxi Driver' NEWSWEEK/APRIL 13, 1981 SPECIAL REPORT Larry Downing-NEwsweek James Knowles-Sipa-Black Star Baker, Meese and Deaver watch Bush on the air: The President has emerged with flying colors' in the legal order of succession. And it islature. As Bush's plane took off, special Wright to the forward compartment to talk. is Weinberger, not Haig, who is in charge agent Ed Pollard told a Bush aide, "There "He conducted himself in an atmosphere of the emergency military commands in has been an attempt on the President and of total calm," Wright said later. He told the absence of Reagan and Bush. To make two agents are down." At that moment, Bush a story about Vice President Harry matters worse, Weinberger had just called the plane started to climb, and Bush didn't Truman on the day that Franklin D. Roo- Gen. David Jones, chairman of the Joint get the word until the pilot leveled off. "Two sevelt died. Truman was with House Speak- Chiefs of Staff, to order a low-level increase Secret Service men are down," Bush said. er Sam Rayburn when he was summoned in military readiness on the ground that "Don't you know how awful he [Pollard] to the White House. "Harry, you must be no one knew whether the attack on the must feel?" President now," Rayburn said. "Sam, I President had been an isolated incident or A few minutes later Haig phoned, telling can't do it," Truman replied. "Mr. Presi- a conspiracy. When Haig returned and Bush to return to Washington and that dent," Rayburn said evenly, "You've got asked everyone to make sure that their ac- a coded teletype message was on its way to do it." The plane landed and taxied into tions squared with his statement, Wein- to Bush's plane. The television in the plane a hangar for security. Before Bush boarded berger refused to rescind his order, making was tuned to ABC, and at 3:11 p.m. the the chopper, a Secret Service agent handed it clear that he thought Haig was over- Vice President of the United States, like him a bullet-resistant raincoat. stepping his authority. "You better read millions of other shocked Americans, first Allies: Landing on the grounds of the your Constitution," Haig snapped. There learned that Reagan, too, had been shot. Naval Observatory, the Vice President's of- was a sharp exchange-Weinberger's office At 3:19, the coded message arrived con- ficial quarters, Bush found Meese waiting later denied leaked details-and finally the firming the news. to escort him to the White House. Bush flap blew over. A few hours later the readi- The Vice President's plane (code name: went directly to the Situation Room. Ev- ness order was lifted. Treasureship) landed in Austin at 3:25 to eryone there stood up as he walked in, and Reassurance: During that time the refuel for the flight to Washington. House he sat down at the head of the conference White House press corps grumbled angri- Majority Leader James Wright flew back table. "All right, bring me up to date," ly over the chaos around them. Final- with the Vice President. Bush invited he said. "How is the President?" He was ly, a senior Administration hand took briefed on Reagan's condition and the aside a reporter friend and asked wan- Haig briefing the press: 'Read your Constitution' messages Haig had sent to U.S. allies. Courtesy NBC TV News ly, "What should we be doing that Weinberger reviewed the military sit- we aren't doing?" "Continuity of gov- uation, reporting that there had been ernment," the reporter snapped. "Get no unusual military movements war- someone out here to reassure every- ranting a U.S. response. one." That role fell first to Dr. Dennis The meeting was low key, calm. S. O'Leary, the articulate and unflap- Once or twice Bush propped his feet pable dean of Clinical Affairs and pub- on the table as he talked. The briefing lic spokesman for the hospital, who over, he left to address the networks. reported that Reagan had "sailed The President "has emerged from this through" surgery. experience with flying colors and with Bush also emerged as a calming most optimistic prospects for a com- force. At the time of the shooting, he plete recovery," he said. "I can re- was in Ft. Worth, Texas, where he insure this nation and the watching had spoken to a convention of cattle- world that the American Government men. He was bound for Austin to ad- is functioning fully and effectively." dress a joint session of the state leg- The Vice President then left to pay 36 NEWSWEEK/APRIL 13, 1981 SPECIAL REPORT he was dancing with the Joffrey II Ballet. An Air Force jet brought a call on Nancy Reagan. She had spent Maureen, 39, Michael, 35, and Patti, the hours during Reagan's operation with 28, in from California. Billy Graham Jim Brady's wife, Sarah, and Timothy arrived; so did Frank Sinatra, who McCarthy's wife, Carolyn, in an office on paid a quiet call on the First Lady the second floor of George Washington at the White House to avoid pub- University Hospital. She also prayed in licity. Queen Elizabeth and the Pope the chapel. Four hours after the shoot- sent comforting words-as did Leo- ing, Reagan was wheeled into the recov- nid Brezhnev and Fidel Castro. ery room, draped in a bright orange blan- Early the next morning, Reagan ket. He stayed there until 6:15 the next redeemed the faith of his men, who morning. had decided against invoking the 'Progress Notes: Reagan's performance 25th Amendment. Around 6:45 a.m., in the recovery room may have been his Meese, Deaver and Baker found the finest starring role. He had a tube in his President propped up in bed, brush- throat and couldn't talk easily. He called ing his teeth. "I should have known for a clipboard, and on a pad of pink paper I wasn't going to avoid a staff meet- he began to dash off "progress notes." "I'd ing," he said, adding to Deaver, the like to do this scene again-starting at keeper of his time, "I've really the hotel," he wrote, convulsing the nurses screwed up the schedule." When the and staff. For a time, he fell into a fitful three counselors assured him soberly sleep. Waking, he grabbed the pad and that the business of government was wrote, "I'm still alive aren't I?" Around going on as usual, Reagan fixed them midnight he once again reached for his with a Western eye and said, "What writing gear and scribbled, "Winston makes you think I'd be happy about Churchill said there is no more exhilarating that?" feeling than being shot without result." Signature: The President still had At 1:30, in a sardonic reference to his res- an intravenous needle in his right pirator, he wrote, "Send me to L.A. where arm and tubes in his nose; but he I can see the air I'm breathing." At 2:20, seemed eager to get back to work. he passed a note to his round-the-clock The aides had brought along a bill nurses that said, "If I knew I had such restricting Federal price supports for talent for this, I'd have tried it sooner." dairy products. It represented Rea- At 3 a.m., the doctors took the tube gan's first real legislative victory. AP out of the President's throat, and he could When they asked gingerly if he want- Dr. O'Leary: Reassuring an anxious nation finally talk. ed to sign it, he said, "Would I ever." "How long will it take to heal?" he asked Using his breakfast tray for a table, he dition. As gently as he could, Ruge finally one of the nurses. scrawled a wobbly signature and sent the filled him in. "Oh, damn. Oh, damn," Rea- "Ten days to two weeks," she replied. bill on its way. Later that morning, when gan blurted, his eyes filling with tears. "Did "I always heal fast," he said. Maureen dropped by, Reagan promised it go into the brain?" Told that the bullet "Keep up the good work," she told him. her that he would fly to California in three had indeed pierced Brady's brain, Reagan "You mean this may happen several weeks for her wedding, then visit President said, "Oh, dear, what's the prognosis?" The more times?" he asked in mock dismay. José López Portillo of Mexico. Maybe, said doctor told him that Brady might be par- Then the President turned serious. "I the doctor, adding that the President tially paralyzed. "We've got to pray," Rea- heard three or four rounds," he said. "Did wouldn't be anywhere near a horse for gan said. When told about McCarthy and anybody else get hit?" There was an awk- two months. Vetoing the sawbones, Reagan Delahanty, he said quietly, "That means ward silence. David Fischer, the President's grinned at his daughter and held up a finger four bullets hit. Good Lord." personal aide, had instructed them not to for one month. Telegrams: As Reagan settled down to let on about the seriousness of Brady's The good vibrations were broken shortly his convalescence, the First Lady bravely wound or the suffering of McCarthy and after noon when Dr. Ruge came in to the kept up her outward composure, but she Delahanty, explaining that Reagan had President's comfortable, $234-a-day room. was suffering deeply. While she had worried very intense feelings about the people The First Lady and aides had refused to constantly about Reagan's safety when he around him and would be deeply upset— give Reagan a newspaper because they was governor of California, she had hoped and perhaps set back in his recovery- didn't want him to read about Brady's con- that his massive electoral popularity last by the bad news. Through the November would somehow night the doctors respected the McCarthy, Delahanty: A bullet called the Devastator help protect him. For the first advice-and evaded the Presi- AP UPI photos three days she slept little. Be- dent's questions. tween catnaps she would wake, Through the day of the shoot- write in her diary and nibble ing and all through the night, fruit; but she lost several the President's family and pounds. She brought her hus- friends murmured prayers and band a picture of them kissing rallied round him. "I was al- at the Inauguration so he most sure that something like wouldn't "forget what I looked this would happen; it's about like." During the day she set time the courts decide the fun up shop in a room next to the is over," said the President's President's. She was surround- brother, Neil Reagan, 72. The ed by boxes containing thou- President's son Ron, 22, flew sands of telegrams. She com- in from Lincoln, Neb., where forted other friends who NEWSWEEK/APRIL 13, 1981 37 SPECIAL REPORT for Haig to carry to Israel, Egypt, Jordan the penalty for attempted murder is life and Saudi Arabia. Weinberger briefed Rea- imprisonment. Hinckley was also charged phoned, and winnowed through get-well gan on his trip this week to a NATO meet- for shooting agent McCarthy, another Fed- gifts for items to cheer the President. Per- ing in Europe on nuclear policy. It was eral crime, and he could still be indicted haps the most successful was a giant horse business-almost-as-usual-under very try- for assaulting Brady and Delahanty. head made of chrysanthemums-with a ing circumstances (page 39). Around 10:30 on the day of the shoot- mane of jelly beans. The suffering of Brady, Delahanty and ing, the Feds brought Hinckley to a Fed- Reagan improved steadily: progressing McCarthy cast a pall over what might have eral court for a bail hearing. Security was from Jell-O to chicken soup, carrot sticks been a happy ending to the crisis. But the tight. Court stenographers, lawyers, em- and homemade coconut ice cream, his fa- others also began to improve. By the end ployees and even the cleaning women all vorite. But even as the atmosphere started of the week, when a doctor asked Brady had to pass through a metal detector. FBI to brighten, the FBI placed an urgent call what he did for a living, he said, "I answer director William Webster sat in the court- to the doctors treating Delahanty. The FBI questions." And when the doctor asked for room ("It was on my watch," he said). lab had determined that Hinckley had been whom, the fallen press secretary replied Federal magistrate Arthur L. Burnett ex- firing particularly vicious exploding bullets quickly, "For anyone who asks them." In- plained Hinckley's rights to him and asked called Devastators that fragmented on im- formed of the progress of the others, Reagan if he understood the charges against him. pact. FBI technicians warned that the slug said, "Oh that's great news, just great news, "Yes, sir," Hinckley said softly, showing lodged in Delahanty's neck near his spinal especially about Jim," then broke up callers no emotion. Did he have a job? "No, sir." cord might still contain a live charge and by quipping, "We'll have to get four bed- Any dependents? "No, sir." Could he pay explode. Delahanty's physicians had in- pans and have a reunion." Later he was $1,000 as a down payment or retainer to tended to leave it in place, avoiding an op- visited by McCarthy. "When your children a lawyer? "No, sir." So the judge appoint- eration that might injure his spinal nerves come, tell them that their father put himself ed two court lawyers to represent him. and paralyze him. They explained the new between me and that guy," Reagan told Rocky's Pawn Shop: Ruff argued that danger to Delahanty and he agreed to an the wounded agent. "I'm proud that there Hinckley was a drifter who should be held operation. A volunteer team of neurosur- are guys around here to take those kinds without bail, "This is not a man with a geons, avoiding the hot cauterizing instru- of jobs." clean record," he said. The previous Oc- ments normally used-for fear of setting While the victims were mending, the FBI tober, Ruffsaid, Hinckley had been arrested off the Devastator-succeeded in extract- was attending to Hinckley. The day of the at the airport in Nashville, Tenn., for pack- ing the slug, and the crisis passed. shooting, a ten-car police motorcade hus- ing two .22-caliber handguns and a .38 re- Letters: As the days wore on, the Presi- tled him from D.C. police headquarters volver. Jimmy Carter was in town that day dent made a remarkably swift recovery, to the FBI's Washington field office on at Opryland, but no one had drawn any set back only by a temporary fever. The the Anacostia River called Buzzards Point. connections; he was fined $50 and his guns First Lady brought him his slippers and While the G-men interrogated him, lawyers were confiscated. Just four days later in robe and he did some walking: 50 yards at the office of Charles F. C. Ruff, U.S. Dallas he had bought two more 22-caliber or so at first. The last hospital tubes were attorney for the District of Columbia, began Saturday-night specials at Rocky's Pawn removed, and the White House allowed to draw up the charges against him. The Shop on East Elm Street-not far from a first, postoperative photograph. After his goal of the prosecutors was to present where John F. Kennedy was shot. Later first full eight hours of sleep, Reagan got evidence showing that Hinckley had at- in Denver, Hinckley had purchased a new back to matters of state. He received a Na- tempted to kill Reagan, not just wound .38. Not long afterward he had set off on tional Security Council briefing. Haig gave him. The distinction was important. The a three-day cross-country bus trip that had him a preflight rundown on his trip to the maximum penalty for simply assaulting the brought him to Washington-and his dead- Middle East, and Reagan dictated letters President is $10,000 and ten years in jail; ly appointment with the President. The outline of Hinckley's odyssey was Tears and anger: The President's brother, Neil, daughter Maureen enough for the judge. He agreed to hold AP UPI him temporarily without bail (to do so permanently might have violated the sus- pect's constitutional rights). Hinckley was led away and taken to the brig at the U.S. Marine Corps base in Quantico, Va., where he was clapped into a 6- by 10-foot cell under round-the-clock guard. Later, his father hired the respected Wash- ington law firm of Williams & Connolly to represent him. The immediate question was whether Hinckley was mentally competent to stand trial. A psychiatrist from Washington's Department of Human Resources exam- ined him and tentatively found him fit to stand trial. A magistrate ordered a more thorough examination. Then Hinckley, wearing a bulletproof vest, was flown by helicopter to the Federal Correctional In- stitution near Durham, N.C., where he was put in isolation for his own protection while he undergoes psychiatric evaluation. It was likely to be a long time before he stands trial. But Hinckley, the glum wan- derer who had never amounted to much, had already found his niche. TOM MATHEWS and the Washington bureau 38 NEWSWEEK/APRIL 13, 1981 SPECIAL REPORT Karl Schumacher-The White House Bush runs a Cabinet meeting from the Vice President's chair: A carefully concerted campaign to demonstrate 'business as usual' Who's Minding the Store Amid the gaiety of his visit a day from Meese, Baker and Deaver price supports. He also approved a number 70th birthday party at (usually together) last week and got a writ- of Presidential appointments during the the White House in Feb- ten briefing every morning as well from week and an Executive order slashing duty- ruary, Ronald Reagan suddenly leaned over national-security adviser Richard V. Allen. free imports. "Anything of consequence is to Barbara Bush to ask "a very personal He also received a series of "summary de- going to him," says a senior staffer. question" about the Vice President. "Is cision memos"-short reports on policy Milkshake Crisis: Bush picked up the George happy with his job?" Reagan asked. meetings he was not able to attend-and President's public duties tactfully and "I just want to be sure he's doing enough. a daily log of Congressional activities. At smoothly, combining much of Reagan's If the awful-awful should happen, George daily schedule with his own and canceling should know everything." Reagan's con- all out-of-town trips (although he did plan cern seemed particularly prophetic last Bush pinch-hits for to fill in for the President at Tuskegee week as George Bush moved confidently Institute in Alabama this week). Bush re- to assume many of the wounded President's the President, but ceived a daily national-security briefing at official obligations-presiding over Cabinet meetings, promoting the Reagan budget, Reagan's three top the White House from the NSC's Allen, presided over several Cabinet meetings posing with foreign dignitaries. But in a aides remain firmly and did not hesitate to order additional concerted campaign of gestures and inter- staff work. He met with Congressional views, Bush and White House aides insisted in control of things. leaders and made a personal trip to Capitol that Reagan himself remains in control and Hill to talk up the Reagan budget (page that throughout the Administration it is 72)-a subject he pressed as well with 40 very much "business as usual." the George Washington University Hos- visiting labor leaders. Bush also met with Although controversy still swirled pital, Reagan's suite became the heart of Polish Deputy Prime Minister Mieczyslaw around Secretary of State Alexander Haig a ten-room White House annex. Special Jagielski and announced the Administra- (page 40), the Administration was running communications gear was installed, and tion's decision to provide new aid to crisis- fairly smoothly, largely because of Reagan's Reagan's longtime personal secretary, He- torn Poland (page 62). His new schedule longstanding style of leadership-more 9- lene von Damm, set up a desk for the du- caused only one minor problem-a diges- to-5 board chairman than chief operating ration of his stay. Less than fourteen hours tive crise after Bush bolted down some officer. Daily business is directed by Rea- after his surgery, Reagan signed in wobbly pepperoni pizza and a milkshake for din- gan's three top aides-White House coun- script a bill to block an increase in dairy- ner late one night. "I didn't sleep too well," selor Edwin Meese III, chief of staff James he laughed the next day. A. Baker III and deputy chief of staff Mi- Convalescent bill-signing: No auto-pen Bush is careful to clear things with Meese chael K. Deaver. "All the critical aspects and Baker. "I want to do what I can of government remain the same," says one I want to do it through you," the senior staffer. Says another: "If we have President told Reagan's senior aid to have a decision, that's when we go over [to see Reagan]. But a President is not called Reagan is kept informed on the most Rones Regan morning after the shooting, a* tained his deferential post on to make a decision every day." the week. "On anything I's one Reagan man, "the the serious matters. He received at least one ways says, 'We'd better a. 80 armly NEWSWEEK/APRIL 13, 1981 41 SPECIAL REPORT "auto-pen" that automatically signs routine larly because of the trouble with Haig. letters, notes and photographs in Reagan's White House sources insist there has been the President'.' Bush tried to avoid any hand. The White House also delayed the no friction among the Big Three-Mease, inadvertent self-aggrandizement; he ran scheduled announcement by Reagan of a Baker and Deaver. "If any one of them Cabinet meetings from the Vice President's regulatory relief package for the nation's has a strong view on anything, the other seat, conducted business in the Vice Presi- ailing auto industry-and of a "briefing two go along," said one insider. "Their de- dent's offices and even posed with Poland's mission" to Tokyo, headed by U.S. Trade sire to cooperate is so extreme that the Jagielski so as to avoid having the White Representative William E. Brock, aimed at only question they ever ask is, 'What's best House loom up symbolically behind him. cutting Japanese auto imports. for the President?' During his convales- For all the deft coping, Reagan's con- Friction? At the weekend there was a cence, more than ever, Ronald Reagan dition did cause some delays in the affairs report of "discord" between the two top must rely on that kind of dedication to of state. A number of military appointments White House staffers. At first they keep his Administration running smoothly. were postponed, as were several previously laughed-"You'll be surprised to learn we scheduled briefing sessions for Reagan. The have friction," Baker told Meese-but they DAVID M. ALPERN with THOMAS M. DeFRANK. ELEANOR CLIFT and JAMES DOYLE President's men even suspended use of the were also disturbed by the report, particu- in Washington 'I Am In Control Here' phones were," says a source who was present. "He was the only guy who knew how to talk to the Vice President's plane." Another top aide speculated that Haig had rushed on camera With the President undergoing surgery and the Vice Presi- before pausing to collect himself. "The unsteadiness of his dent rushing back from Texas, Ronald Reagan's Cabinet as- television performance didn't match the steadiness of his per- sembled in the situation room of the White House. Suddenly, formance downstairs," he insisted. One reason for Haig's I'm- Alexander Haig bolted from the room. "What's he doing?" in-charge bluster, according to partisans, was to send a pointed asked startled aides. "Where's he going?" A few minutes later message to the Soviet Union, which was massing troops on Haig was on nationwide television, his voice quavering, his the Polish border. "He wanted it known our guard was still face ashen. "I am in control here he proclaimed. But up," says a sympathetic official. he clearly wasn't-and once again he had plunged himself Credibility: Still, the we-love-Al chorus seemed rather into conflict with his own Administration colleagues. This strained. Some officials conceded that the campaign was not time Haig's embarrassing performance threatened to undercut so much an endorsement of Haig's behavior as an urgent attempt his authority abroad as he embarked on his first foreign mission to boost his credibility. "It was important to send a message to the Middle East. The gaffe also raised a new round of to the Hill," says a White House topsider. "There's been a doubts about Haig's coolness under fire and heightened spec- certain amount of chatter up there. This man has been gouged ulation that he could not long survive as Secretary of State. in public." As Haig departed for the Middle East, the White Even Haig's friends were taken aback by the televised dis- House felt it necessary to take the extraordinary step of publicly comfiture of the four-star general who had steered Richard endorsing its chief architect of foreign policy. "The Secretary Nixon through his last crisis. "I've never seen him like that of State leaves today in the full colors as Secretary of State," before," said a State Department colleague who has known emphasized a spokesman-"and with the full confidence of Haig for years. "He was crack- the President." ing emotionally." In Congressional 'Everything's fine, Chief-in fact, we've just been But this may not be enough to cloakrooms even his Republican al- doing some papering in the Cabinet Room' assuage the doubts of Haig's foreign lies complained about Haig's four- G 1981 Herblock in The Washington Post hosts. An official of the United minute torrent of what one called Arab Emirates told the Associated "dingbat" misstatements on the Press that Haig "should not expect Presidential succession and the much from us until we are sure the state of military readiness. "I can Washington leadership is no longer understand his perception of the disunited." In Washington, Haig's need to reassure," said Democratic future in the Reagan Administra- Sen. Joseph Biden, a persistent Haig tion seems uncertain. "I just hope critic. "But the Secretary's action he now understands how we work," had an entirely opposite effect." sighs one senior official. "It's a gen- 'Contact Point: As the devas- tlemanly give-and-take, not con- tating reviews poured in, the Ad- frontational." State Department of- ministration moved to limit the ficials worry that, if the pragmatic damage to its senior Cabinet offi- Haig steps down, American foreign cer. Reports of White House dis- HAIG PROBLEM policy will be dominated by White may over Haig's performance were House political coordinator Lyn "honest-to-God baloney," chief of Nofziger, Sen. Jesse Helms and oth- staff James Baker told NEWSWEEK er theologians of the right. Even flatly. Other White House aides Haig's close aides rate his chances who earlier had sniped at Haig went for keeping his job at less than even. out of their way to praise him as Haig's first venture abroad had thus an effective "contact point" during become a mission not only to shore the first hour of the crisis. As a up America's standing in the Mid- Nixon White House veteran, Haig dle East, but also to salvage his own was the Cabinet officer most famil- eroding position at home. iar with situation-room procedures. STEVEN STRASSER with ELEANOR "He was the only guy who knew CLIFT, THOMAS M. DeFRANK, HOWARD FINEMAN and JOHN what to do, who knew where the WALCOTT in Washington 38 What the Doctors Did "I can't breathe," than a dozen units of blood and prepared anesthetic thiopental sodium and then whispered Ronald Rea- for transfusion. Although Reagan is type passed a tube down his throat so that a gan. He was sweating O-positive, at first they used O-negative, respirator could aid his breathing. Then and gray-faced, sagging toward the floor' which can be given to anyone regardless they put him to sleep with nitrous oxide as he walked into the emergency room and of his blood type, and later used O-positive administered through a mask. "We will fol- was lifted onto a wheeled table. Quick hands to replace the 2½ quarts lost from the time low routine trauma protocol," Giordano began stripping off his clothes. "We don't of injury. In many such gunshot wounds, announced to his colleagues. think he's hit," said a Secret Service man. the lung reinflates and the bleeding stops The first order of business was peritoneal "We think he broke a rib when we pushed when the chest tube is inserted, and the lavage, a procedure to double-check for in- him against the car." But a doctor had bullet can be left where it is without any juries in the abdominal cavity. Giordano already spotted the bullet hole in the Presi- risk. But Reagan continued to bleed. made a small incision under the navel and dent's suit jacket-and the medical team "What are we doing, Joe?" asked Dr. pumped a clear liquid into the abdomen. at George Washington University Hospital Sol Edelstein, chief of the emergency room. The liquid that drained back out seemed that was to save the lives of the President "Are we headed to ICU or are we headed free of blood, showing that no organs had and his press secretary was already well to OR?" Edelstein wanted to know whether been damaged. But to make sure, the fluid into its practiced routine. intensive care would be enough, or if an was sent to the lab for analysis. After 45 The President was exhibiting early symp- minutes Giordano turned his patient over toms of shock. Though alert, Reagan was to the thoracic surgeons, Aaron and Dr. gasping for air and sweating, and his blood How the surgeons Katherine Chaney. pressure had dropped. Paged on the hos- Incision: The President was turned on pital's speakers, Dr. Joseph M. Giordano, treated Reagan's his right side with his arms taped in front head of the trauma team, hurried to the of him. The team removed the chest tube emergency room, where Reagan's blood wounded chest to get more room and then made a 6-inch pressure quickly recovered after he lay and James Brady's incision, from under the left nipple to down. The doctor gave the President a local the left side. The President's ribs were anesthetic and then inserted a tube into injured brain. spread apart by a metal retractor and, wear- the lung cavity just beneath the bullet hole ing a lamp on his forehead, Aaron peered under his left arm. Other physicians and into the chest. He first removed a large technicians drew blood samples, hooked operation was urgent. Surgeon Benjamin clot of blood and then began searching for up an oxygen mask and intravenous tubes Aaron, 47, decided to operate. As the team the bullet. The surgeon determined that to monitor blood gases and administer prepared for the 200-foot journey to the neither the heart nor the aorta, the body's blood, and inserted a catheter to measure "heart room," fully equipped for major main artery, had sustained any injury. But urine flow. On a chest X-ray, the bullet chest and heart surgery, Edelstein cau- failing to find the bullet, he ordered another showed up as a white spot in the lower tioned the technicians: "We are going slow, X-ray-a side view of the chest. After half lobe of the left lung. It had torn a 3-inch slow, slow." The President was propped an hour Aaron found the "Devastator" ex- furrow through the lung, deflating it as at a 30-degree angle on the wheeled cart, plosive slug, removed it with a probe and it went. But the physicians couldn't be sure or gurney, awake and talking to his wife handed it to a Secret Service agent, who whether they had spotted the entire bullet and aides as he passed; his vital signs were carried it away in a metal cup. It had failed or whether fragments had broken off and still "rock stable," a doctor said later, and to explode on impact, but was flattened struck organs in the abdominal cavity. Fur- there was no need to risk anyone stumbling to the size and shape of a dime, suggesting ther X-rays of the abdomen reassured them. over one of the tubes threaded into him. that it had ricocheted off the Presidential Meanwhile, the President continued to In the operating room, the team gave limousine before striking Reagan. bleed steadily through the tube in his chest. the President an intravenous dose of the Aaron then sutured the tear in the lung, Quickly, the trauma team set up more Christoph Blumrich-NEWSWEEx removed the retractor and closed the REAGAN'S CHEST WOUND Aaron: Searching for the bullet Giordano: Routine trauma protocol Photos by Leif Skoogfors-Woodfin Camp & Assoc. 2 3 4 c Heart 5 Bullet 6 enters here. Bullet lodges in lung. Bullet ricochets off seventh rib. NEWSWEEK/APRIL 13, 1981 SPECIAL REPORT brain tissue, along with the bullet and bone the center at the base of the brain that fragments. controls respiration and consciousness and chest incision. During the operation, Rea- Kobrine made a "bicoronal" incision Brady had gotten prompt treatment. gan was given another quart of blood. "Skin across the top of Brady's head from ear The day after surgery, Brady showed to skin," the surgery had taken two hours. to ear. Next, he drilled a number of holes hopeful signs. He was conscious, his pup:ls But before Reagan was taken to the re- in the skull and removed a "large window" responded to light and he was able to move covery room, the team spent another hour of bone. Then he took out bone splinters the right side of his body in response to scrubbing off the orange povidone-iodine and bullet fragments from the left frontal commands from doctors. Later, he could disinfectant that covered the chest area, lobe, where he found the damage "not too even toss a cotton ball to his wife, Sarah, dressing the wounds and waiting for the extensive." On the right side of Brady's with his right hand. And when a doctor anesthesia to wear off. brain, Kobrine suctioned out a large blood held up three fingers, Brady said, "Three." The President's first hours in the recov- clot. He found "brisk bleeding" from the Following surgery, Brady was put on anti- ery room were uncomfortable. "He felt like anterior and middle cerebral arteries, which biotics to prevent infection, and given ster- he couldn't breathe," said one physician. had been severed. When the bleeding was oids and a drug called mannitol to reduce Analysis of his blood showed that he wasn't brought under control, Brady's blood pres- the swelling of the brain. assimilating quite enough oxygen at first, sure dropped to a normal range. Finally, 'Fine': Kobrine reported that he was mak- and he continued on the respirator for eight Kobrine removed the damaged tissue, frag- ing an "extraordinary recovery." By the and a half hours. At the time, he was un- ments and the main bullet fragment. The weekend, he was off the critical list, and aware that press sécretary James Brady was surgeon estimated that Brady lost 20 per out of intensive care. The press secretary lying in critical condition just the oth- was speaking short sentences. He told er side of a cloth screen. the surgeon, "I'm feeling fine," and Brady was by far the most seriously BRADY'S HEAD INJURY when a telephone started to ring he injured in the assassination attempt. said, "Somebody answer the phone." He had arrived at the hospital in a Speech, under- Brady was able to move his right arm fire-department ambulance three Breathing standing, infor- and leg normally, but showed little minutes after Reagan and was mation processing movement on the left. Though it is wheeled to the same trauma room. Largest too early to speculate, Kobrine pre- "I saw the bullet wound in his fore- portion dicted that left motor function will head. It was over the left eye," said of bullet improve significantly if there are no lodges Bullet and paramedic Roberto Hernandez. "He here. bone further complications. Moreover, was moving his arms and legs, but fragments since the "dominant" left side of the to no purpose. He was sort of like retrieved. brain was harmed only slightly, the squirming." In the emergency room, surgeon said there was a good chance Brady was met by a neurosurgical Nerves of that Brady has suffered little or no resident and an anesthesiologist. His vision intellectual impairment. However, blood pressure was a very high 240 and smell he suspects that "spatial orienta- over 160. He was moving his right tion," governed by the right side of limbs restlessly and he seemed to be Personality the brain, may have been affected, Sensation, mumbling. He was given an anes- judgment, left side and since the olfactory tracts in the mood thetic and a tube was placed in his of body right hemisphere were destroyed, the windpipe to assist breathing. Bullet gourmet Brady has probably lost his Fragments: The bullet entered Motion, left enters sense of taste and smell. Brady's head over the left eye and side of body Areas of potential and President Reagan, however, was passed through a small portion of brain damage breaks making a speedy recovery last week. the left frontal lobe of the brain with- up. He was receiving cough therapy to out causing much damage. But it did Christoph Blumrich-NEWSWEEx prevent fluid from accumulat- break up somewhere inside the skull; Drawing shows bullet's path through ing in his lungs and occasional the fragments passed mostly through the brain administrations of oxygen the right frontal lobe, causing severe through a plastic tube under bleeding and tissue damage. The largest cent of the tissue in the right his nose. He was also eating piece of the bullet came to rest in the parietal hemisphere. Kobrine replaced heartily and walking in his hos- lobe at the rear of the brain behind the the flap of skull and inserted pital corridor. The only cause right ear, with smaller fragments around temporary drains between the for concern came late in the it. At first, the outlook was bleak. A cross- bone and skin. week when Reagan's tempera- sectional X-ray taken in the emergency In two crucial respects, ture rose to 102. However, after room looked, in the words of one physician, Brady can be considered some fluctuations it dropped like a "disaster." lucky. He had been hit by a to normal. There was a brief Brady was immediately taken to the op- small-caliber bullet of low ve- scare that toxic amounts of erating room, where his head was shaved locity, minimizing the damage lead azide-the explosive used usually caused by the shock AP in preparation for surgery that was to last in the bullet-might have more than six hours. Neurosurgeon Dr. waves and the sheer mass of Kobrine: Optimistic leached into the President's Arthur Kobrine tried to be optimistic. a larger slug. And nearly all body, but this was discounted When he heard that the media had reported the left side of the brain had apparently by experts. Throughout the President's or- that the press secretary was already dead, been spared. In most people, the left side deal, doctors were impressed by his good Kobrine replied, "Somebody ought to tell is the brain's information-processing center condition and youthful physiology. "It's me and the patient." An ophthalmologist and controls the faculties of speech, writing a good lesson," said the hospital's spokes- was called in to deal with swelling and and comprehension. The motor areas of man, Dr. Dennis O'Leary, "that age itself a clot in the left eye, and he made several the left side also control movement on the is not an ultimate measure of an individual's incisions to drain blood and relieve pres- right side of the body. Fortunately, the stamina, health and capability." sure. Then Kobrine moved in to explore shock of the bullet and the swelling from MATT CLARK with MARY HAGER and the injury and remove all of the damaged the injury had not affected the brain stem, DAVID C. MARTIN in Washington and bureau reports 46 NEWSWEEK/APRIL 13, 1981 THE WASHINGTON POST Sunday, April 5, 1981 The Day of the Jackal in Washington At the Hospital "Situation negative," the advance agent replied. At the shooting scene, agents had By Lou Cannon The quiet ended in the rapid fire of overwhelmed a young blond man later Washington Post Staff Writer a handgun and screams from the identified as John Warnock Hinckley It began as an ordinary spring day in crowd, Within nine seconds six shots Jr. They piled him into a police car Washington: light showers, the usual lines of had been fired in rapid succession at and took him away. tourists at the White House, a routine speech the presidential party. Before the limousine reached the by the president. One shot hit Secret Service agent hospital, nurses had cleared space in Then, gunfire. For six hours the nation Timothy J. McCarthy, who thrust the resuscitation bay for the shooting watched and wondered. Would the president himself between President Reagan victims. A first radio message has told live? Would he survive and be disabled? and the gunman, in the stomach. them there has been a shooting and Would the nation be plunged into constitu- One shot hit District police officer that "some men" have been hurt. A tional crisis? Thomas K. Delahanty in the neck. second message informed them that It was 2:24 p.m. Monday, March 31. Mi- One shot, although no one knew it one was the president of the United chael K. Deaver wasn't supposed to be at the immediately, bounced off the armored States. Washington Hilton. He was supposed to be limousine and hit Reagan in the chest, At 2:35 p.m. the limousine arrived back in the White House working on the penetrating his left lung. Yet another at George Washington. Reagan was president's schedule. But it was a busy day hit a window in a building across the feeling pain in his chest and was hav- street and fragmented. at the office for chief of staff James A. Baker ing difficulty breathing. As he got out III, and Deaver, his deputy, had volunteered And one shot, the shot that did the of the car, D.C. paramedic Roberto most damage, struck White House Hernandez recognized the limousine. to go in his place with President Reagan when he addressed the Building Trades press secretary Brady over the left On inaugural day he had been as- Council. eye, penetrating his brain. Brady fell, signed to the ambulance that followed No one noticed the gunman before the with blood gushing from his head. An the new president around Washing- advance man, Rick Ahearn, put a ton. firing began. No one particularly saw him, or white handkerchief under Brady's "I literally froze," Hernandez said head. It quickly turned red with afterward. "I didn't believe what I was blood. actually seeing. I noticed he looked very pale and he had an apprehensive In a matter of seconds Parr had look about him The stare in his shoved Reagan into the limousine and eyes was like he was in a slight daze." pulled the door shut, He commanded Reagan got out of the car. He the driver, Drew Unrue, to pull away, walked to the emergency room, his Aing and the presidential limousine sped out face drawn, Parr's arm around him. THE PASS started ask- from the scene. A staff control car, Incredibly, no one had thought to -ual questions. I turned and with Deaver Inside, followed. order a stretcher to be ready for him. When the president entered the emer- "You son-of-a-bitch, you broke my gency room, he feil to one knee. rib," Reagan said to Parr inside the "I can't breathe," he said. limousine. He was joking, but he was For a moment the workers in the hurting from the blow. resuscitation bay were stunned. "Is Later in the week the president that who I think it is?" a nurse asked. would tell Deaver that he hadn't real- Then they sprang into action. Her- ized he had been hit by a bullet but nandez removed Reagan's shoes, socks that he certainly knew he had been and pants while his partner Eric Sim- hit. mons cut off his shirt. "It was a blow like I never felt," the presidential detail, "All I could think of was Parkland," never saw the gun- Reagan said. "It was like someone man, either. The gunman was shielded by hitting me with a hammer as hard as Deaver said, referring to the Dallas the crowd. hospital where John F. Kennedy was they could." taken. Secret Service agents had looked over this Parr, not knowing that the presi- crowd, as they always do. It is not easy to dent had been shot, originally ordered But Deaver, a short, quiet, patient spot a concealed gunman in a friendly crowd. the limousine to return to the White man who knows Reagan better than House. But when he saw Reagan anyone on the White House staff and Thirty seconds before the president arrived at the hotel, Parr had received a favorable coughing blood, the bright-red oxygen- was treated like a son by him, was situation report. ated blood that comes from the lung, busy with other matters. Cool and "Rawhide follow to Rawhide advance," he he and the president thought a rib collected, Deaver found a telephone had been broken by the protective bay outside the emergency ward and said, using the code word for the president. shove. Parr told Unrue to drive to called the White House. He reached "Situation report?" George Washington University Hospi- Margaret Tutwiler, the secretary to tal instead of the White House. He: chief of staff Baker. radioed the control car and told "Keep this line open, Margaret," he Deaver where he was going. said. "There's been a shooting, and the president's hurt. We don't think he was hit, but he may have broken -2- Gergen went to find White House At the White House counselor Edwin Mecse III, the presi- Outside the resuscitation bay, At the White House they already dent's top aide, who was with his dep- Deaver and aide David Fisher kept knew about the shooting. But they uty, Craig Fuller. They already knew. the telephone lines open to the White did not know much about what had Baker ran down to the Secret Service House. Deaver had Nancy Reagan happened or that the president had command post in the basement to called immediately. He also asked been shot. find out what had happened. It was Tutwiler to tell his secretary to call about 2:35 p.m., the time of Reagan's his wife, Carolyn, and tell her that he Baker had been working in his of- arrival at the hospital. was unharmed, but Deaver's secretary, fice through the morning. At 1 p.m. Shirley Moore, had already done SO. he went to the White House mess to At the Hotel Meanwhile, Brady and McCarthy eat his usual lunch: a tunafish salad had arrived at the hospital, and Dela- Back at the Hilton, the ambulances sandwich and buttermilk. Brady and hanty had been taken to Washington had borne away the wounded men, his deputy, Larry Speakes, were fin- Hospital Center. Brady looked bad ishing their lunch as Baker and Tut- leaving behind the remnants of the and his blood pressure was dangerous- wiler arrived. They exchanged pleas- shooting: an umbrella. a dropped briefcase, the bloody sidewalk grate ly high. To the paramedics, McCarthy looked best of all. antries, and Brady said he was going where Brady fell. "Are you still with us?" a fellow to the Hilton for Reagan's speech. Prosperi, knowing that the presi- The first word at the White House agent asked him. "Oh, yes," McCarthy dential limousine had started out for quickly replied. that something had gone wrong came the White House, mistakenly believed in a telephone call from David Pros- At 2:36 p.m. Mrs. Reagan arrived the president had arrived there, and at the hospital She wanted to see her peri, an assistant press secretary. He SO informed the press. One eyewitness, was at the scene where the shots were husband immediately, but was told by Ramon Flores, attempted to convince Deaver that she could not. When she fired, and he saw Brady go down. Prosperi rushed into the hotel and skeptical reporters that Reagan had did get to see him, he greeted her grabbed the first telephone he found. been hit. He shrugged his shoulders with a line that may become a classic: It was a charge phone, SO he gave the when they did not believe him. "Honey, I forgot to duck." operator the White House press office At the Hospital number and billed the call to his At the White House home telephone. Within minutes at George Washing- At the White House, events moved "Get me Larry. It's an emergency," ton the resucitation area was crowded swiftly. Tutwiler had left the first he said into the telephone. with members of the trauma team White House line open for Deaver, Speakes was just coming out of a and Secret Service agents. As Dr. then she rounded up Baker, Meese, meeting with other White House aides Dennis O'Leary related later, a nurse Gergen, Speakes and communications in the Roosevelt Room on the auto- trying to take Reagan's blood pressure director Frank Ursomarso, who were mobile regulation package that is to could not hear through the stetho- in a hall beyond the Oval Office. She be announced this week. Betsy scope because of the din and had to told them Deaver was on the tele- Strong, a press aide, ran up and told take it by feeling the pulse in phone. him Prosperi was calling. He picked Reagan's arm. It was only about 75 Baker went into his office and took up the phone of Kathy Ahern, low enough to signal that the presi- one phone. Mecse picked up the other Brady's secretary. dent was in danger of shock. phone on the same line. Baker was at "The president has been shot at and Brady has been hit," Prosperi Quickly, trauma team members in- his desk. Deaver told them that the serted an intravenous tube and began said. president had been shot. running fluid into the president's "Shit," said Meese. "Thanks," Speakes replied, and hung up. From the look on his face veins. They took blood samples to "Oh, Jesus," said Baker. the others in the room knew it was a measure the blood oxygen content and Both men moved swiftly to do what crisis. to match Reagan's blood for a trans- was necessary. They agreed that the "I don't know what it looked like, fusion. Meanwhile, they called for O- vice president had to be called, and but it hit pretty hard," Speakes said. negative blood, the type that can be that the Cabinet should assemble in Ahern began to weep. given to anyone. Reagan's blood type the White House Situation Room. is O-positive. Secretary of State Alexander M. White House staff director David R. Gergen was coming out of the Dr. Joseph M. Giardano, the sur- Haig Jr. had called, and Baker called geon who heads the trauma team, was him back. same meeting Speakes had attended. The first instinct of both was to walk among the first to respond to the "It's very important how we handle out on the colonade and watch the page, and he saw Reagan within five this world-wide," Haig told Baker, motorcade return, which they ex- minutes of his arrival. By then, the who agreed. pected momentarily. Instead, Speakes president's blood pressure had risen to Treasury Secretary Donald T. telephoned Jack Warner of the Secret 100, but he was coughing up blood, Regan was the first Cabinet officer to his breathing was fast and labored, reach Baker's office. Treasury is the Service. Warner knew something had and the surgeons had discovered the boss of the Secret Service, and Regan happened, but did not have the de- slit-like wound under his left arm. had been told of the incident within tails. Gergen ran down the corridor to Giardano said that the likelihood of two minutes of its occurrence. Regan Baker's office with the news. He burst a collapsed lung and the danger that was on a long distance call from Los into the office, almost knocking down Reagan might be bleeding from his Angeles when the call came, and he Tutwiler, who had her back against heart or a major blood vessel made it hung up and went immediately by car the door. necessary to insert a chest tube at across the street to the White House. once. At the hospital, Deaver put White Meanwhile, Dr. Neofytos T. Tsan- Aaron said he could feel splintering House physician Daniel Ruge on the garis, the hospital's acting chief of of the seventh rib where the bullet open line, and Baker took notes on staff, had been summoned from a had nicked it and ricocheted into the what Ruge told him: "He [the presi- meeting by a brief announcement: chest. Outside the left lung, he found dent] has received a chest wound in "The president of the United States is a large blood clot, and, after he re- the left chest. He is in stable condi- in the emergency room." Tsangaris moved It, he could see where the bul- tion. The blood pressure and pulse is said he quickly realized that three let had entered the lung. Quickly, he okav. He is alert and fighting. Next separate operating rooms, one for each examined the heart and the major stop could be the operating room. You shooting victim, must be readied at vessels nearby. They were untouched. ought to get right over here." 11 once with nurses, technicians and All the bleeding was coming from the Haig arrived. Later, at the State equipment. smaller vessels within the torn lung. Department, a spokesman announced It was now 3:20 p.m. and Reagan "We began to feel around for the that Baker and Meese had left the was being prepared for surgery. He bullet and to our chagrin we could White House by the time Haig got had an oxygen mask over his face not find that bullet within the lung," there. It was an incorrect announce- when Baker saw him, but winked at he said later. Aaron ordered an X-ray ment. Regan, Baker and Tutwiler all -his chief of staff. taken on the operating table. The bul- remember that Haig arrived just be- At 3:30 p.m., approximately 45 let was visible, embedded in a portion fore Baker and Meese left the office. minutes after he was been brought to of the left lung just behind the heart They talked briefly, and Meese and the hospital, he was wheeled to the and "flattened almost as thin as a Baker agreed that Haig would be the operating room. His bleeding had dime," he said. "contact point" at the White House slowed somewhat, and he had received At last Aaron felt the bullet and while they were at the hospital. No a transfusion of five units of blood. pulled it out. Then he removed some one said anything about anyone being "Please tell me you're Republicans," of the dead lung tissue, inserted a "in control." But there was a brief he joked to the masked surgical team drain into the bullet's track, and discussion of the 25th Amendment, surrounding him. closed the incisions. The president providing for presidential succession, After that, according to operating had been in the operating room for because no one knew how badly room technician Michael Borowski, 3½ hours, and apparently was out of Reagan was hurt. Bush would be back who helped with instruments during danger. With a breathing tube in his by the time they knew, everyone the operation, the president was quiet. throat, and still on a respirator, the agreed. "I saw Reagan looking around at ev- president was taken to the recovery room. Meese told Tutwiler to get them a erybody busy doing their thing There had been anxious moments car. "I'll handle it," Regan said. He he recalled later. "I just kind of took his hand. He had sort of tears in his for Nancy Reagan during this opera- directed an agent to get them a siren- equipped Secret Service car so they eyes He really had this look of tion, moments she spent in a small appreciation on his face. That's what private office the hospital made avail- could speed through traffic to the hos- able to her and in the chapel, where pital. Speakes and Lyn Nofziger were really touched me." she met Sarah Brady, whose husband with Meese and Baker. The first part of the operation re- Nofziger is a longtime Reagan aide quired a tiny incision below the navel. had been erroneously declared dead in Into the incision Giordano inserted mid-afternoon reports on all three who proved a composed man in the television networks. day's crisis. He offered to help be- about a quart of salt solution to deter- cause "Brady is out of commission," mine whether any bullets had pene-) For 53 minutes after the shooting not much was known at the White and everyone was happy to have him. trated the abdominal cavity and House press office. It wasn't until 3:18 He and Speakes are old adversaries, caused bleeding there. When sucked p.m. that communications director but they buried their differences on out again, the fluid was clear, indicat- Ursomarso stood on veteran press aide that bloody day. ing no abdominal injuries. Connie Gerrard's chair in the upper Haig, Regan, Gergen and intergov- A report was given to Baker and press office to tell a packed crowed of ernmental relations aide Rich Wil- Deaver outside the operating room. reporters that Reagan had been shot. liamson went down to the Situation Nancy Reagan was told the good Every television set was turned on Room in the White House basement. news, and tears came to her eyes. as staff and reporters watched replay At the hospital Deaver alternated Borowski said Reagan was then after replay. The room was full of his time between Nancy Reagan and turned on his right side and redraped people who work with Brady every the telephones. The grim mood was for the more major operation, the to- day, and the replays, particularly lightened on one occasion when a hos- racotomy. Assisted by Dr. Kathleen those in slow motion, made all who pital clerk with a green form in his Cheyney, Dr. Benjamin L. Aaron cut were present think that his chances hand ran around trying to get some a six-inch incision through the skin for survival were slight. information on the patient. "Who is parallel with the ribs, extending hori- Some aides wept for their fallen he?" the clerk wanted to know. zontally from below the left arm to- press secretary. It was pouring rain "R-e-a-g-a-n," Deaver spelled out. ward the center of the chest. Then he outside now, and correspondents who "You are kidding," the clerk said. used retractors to spread the ribs usually would have broadcast from "I'm not kidding," said Deaver. apart. the White-House lawn stood on chairs in the briefing room to get above the heads of their milling colleagues and talked to fill air time. At 3:37 p.m. Gergen appeared in phone line to Air Force Two, and the crowded briefing room. Some knew they were talking for Haig was guarded in his communica- posterity, but others didn't even no- "Good afternoon," he said. "This is to confirm the statements made at tion. He also had a very poor connec- tice the recorders. What the men in tion. the Situation Room wanted to know George Washington hospital that the "I think you should come directly were three things: how badly was the president was shot once in the left back to Washington," Haig said. side this afternoon as he left the hotel. president hit? Was the shooting a "There's been an incident." He also conspiracy or an individual act? His condition is stable. told Bush that he would be sending Would Brady survive? "A decision is now being made him a message over the coded Telex While first reports from the hospi- whether or not to operate to remove machine that is the only secure chan- the bullet. The White House and the tal seemed to be positive, everyone in nel of communications between Air the Situation Room was aware that vice president are in communication. Force Two and the ground. the president was 70 years old and And the vice president is now en Bush hung up and turned to his faced major surgery. They were trying route to Washington." aides. "We are going directly back to to prepare for every contingency. On Air Force Two Washington," he said. "I just spoke to Smith and Fielding briefed the Haig." It was a quarter of an hour Cabinet members on constitutional Going to Washington had not been later before he learned what had hap- succession and on the 25th Amend- George Bush's plan. On a day of rou- pened. ment, which spells out the procedures tine politicking, he had slipped into "Mr. Vice President, in the incident for the vice president's assuming office his blue, Eisenhower-style official you will have heard about by now, the in case of presidential disability. The flight jacket, buckled his seatbelt and president was struck in the back," the review was brief, because the Cabinet settled back for a moment of relax- Telex from Haig said. "Medical au- members spent much of the time on ation as his plane took off from Fort thorities are deciding now whether or the telephone and, like millions of Worth at 2:41 p.m. EST for a short not to operate. Recommend you re- other Americans, before the television hop to Austin. turn to D.C. at earliest possible mo- set. Behind him was a speech to cattle- ment." Of those in the Situation Room, men and the dedication of the former Quickly, the word was passed Smith knew Reagan best. He is Hotel Texas as a national monument through the plane. House Majority Reagan's long-time attorney, a charter - it was the hotel where John F. Leader Jim Wright (D-Tex.) walked member of the "kitchen cabinet" and Kennedy had spent his last night be- into the front cabin, and Bush turned a close friend. He also has jurisdiction fore that fatal trip to Dallas. Ahead, to him and said, "Why in the world over the FBI, and was on the tele- in Austin, awaited an address to the would anybody shoot a man like Ron- phone immediately, checking on Texas Legislature and a news confer- ald Reagan?" Hinckley. ence. Air Force Two did not have enough The readout from the FBI showed Air Force Two was still climbing, a fuel on board to make it to Washing- that the suspect carried psychiatrists' couple of minutes later, when Edward ton nonstop, so the plane landed in cards in his pocket, which convinced Pollard, head of the vice president's Austin as scheduled, but only for refu- them that he probably was acting on Secret Service detail, took an urgent eling. Bush stayed on board, sipping his own. message from the Fort Worth office. on a diet cola and saying very little. Smith was outwardly calm, but his He was told of the assassination at- thoughts, like Deaver's, went back to tempt, and was told that the presi- At the White House the day John F. Kennedy was shot dent had not been hit. And he also At the White House, Cabinet mem- and the pall it cast over the nation. was informed, incorrectly, that two bers and other high White House offi- He was relieved to hear that Reagan Secret Service agents were down. Pol- cials assembled in the Situation was trying out one-liners on the doc- lard immediately relayed this message Room: Attorney General William tors, knowing, as he would say later, to Bush. French Smith, Defense Secretary "that this was a sign of normalcy." Bush nodded quietly and began Caspar W. Weinberger, Transporta- Weinberger had been told by his talking of the possibility of shortening tion Secretary Drew Lewis, National secretary that he was wanted at the his Austin stopover. The telephone Security Council staff director Richard Situation Room. At first, he couldn't line flashed again. This time it was V. Allen, domestic adviser Martin An- find a car, and thought of taking a Bush's press secretary, Peter Teeley, derson, CIA Director William J. taxi, but CIA Deputy Director Bobby with a message identical to the one Casey, counsel Fred Fielding. Hours Inman was visiting him, and he of- Pollard had given. later, Commerce Secretary Malcolm fered to take the defense secretary to The vice president's chief legislation Baldrige would arrive. the White House. aide, Robert V. Thompson, rushed back to the VIP section in mid-plane There were so many people rushing When Weinberger arrived, Haig was back and forth that Allen tried to making telephone calls on the only and announced to the assembled close the door to the Situation Room secure phone in the Situation Room. Bush aides and three Texas congress- to keep some of the staff members Weinberger stepped outside to call men that an attempt had been made out. Allen put a tape recorder on the Gen. David Jones, chairman of the on the president's life. table in the center of the room along Joint Chiefs of Staff. They discussed Up front, at 3:04 p.m., Haig tele- with another that was already there. the combat-readiness of American phoned Bush. There is no secure tele- forces, and Weinberger, after receiving unspecified classified information on a little white slip of paper, directed Jones to order "a little higher state of readiness," but one that was short of a full alert. -5- Other Cabinet members were mak- Haig was then asked who was mak- Afterward, both Haig and Weinber- ing similar determinations in their ing decisions for the government at ger would try to minimize the ex- areas of responsibility. the time, and responded, "Constitu- change, which lasted only a few Regan told Treasury Undersecre- tionally, gentlemen, you have the minutes. Haig responded to criticisms tary for Monetary Affairs Beryl president, the vice president and the of his appearance by saying that he Sprinkel to tell the Federal Reserve secretary of state, in that order, and was winded from running up the that the dollar should be supported should the president decide he wants stairs. on foreign exchange markets. After- to transfer the helm to the vice presi- "I may have been quivery, but I've ward, Regan described his action as "a dent, he will do SO. He has not done been through 50 times worse than normal procedure that has been done that. As of now, I am in control here, that," he said. before" when some crisis threatens the in the White House, pending return of dollar's value. the vice president and in close touch At the Hospital The order meant that the Federal with him. If something came up, I Reserve bought dollars with other cur- would check with him, of course." At the hospital, Haig's impromptu rencies, though not in massive Haig's appearance astounded Baker briefing was one of the bad moments amounts. and Meese, who were watching at the for the watching White House aides. The attention of the officials in the hospital. And it flabbergasted Haig's An even worse one came in the press Situation Room then turned to the colleagues in the Situation Room, room when the television networks none of whom had been consulted incorrectly announced Brady's death. television set, which showed Speakes before he left on his self-appointed Some aides were furious. Others wept in the press room fending off ques- mission. silently as they continued to work. tions. He hadn't been told much, and "What's Al doing up there?" asked Baker, however, knew better than some of the questions concerned pos- Lewis. the networks. He had just had a re- sible emergency actions the nation Weinberger, returning from his tele- port that Brady was holding his own, was taking in the crisis. He was asked phone call to Jones, looked up and and he called the Situation Room and the key question of whether the U.S. saw Haig on the screen and asked, told them to disregard the report. military had been placed on higher "Why are they running that old tape Hospital interns who heard the re- readiness. of Al Haig?" ports asked the surgeon operating on "Not that I'm aware' of," Speakes It's not a tape, he was told. Haig's Brady if he hadn't heard that his pa- replied. up there. tient was dead. His response drew criticism from "He can't be, he was right here," At about 4:30 p.m. former president both Weinberger and Haig, but the said Weinberger, still disbelieving. As Richard M. Nixon called the hospital, secretary of state was especially agi- he watched, Haig told reporters in the asking for Nancy Reagan. She was tated. He said that "the next time briefing room that no change in mili- unable to come to the telephone, but someone opens their yap" they had tary alert procedures was contem- Baker did. better make sure that what they are plated. "Please convey my concern that I saying is true. Weinberger then left Weinberger knew that this was un- know is shared by all Americans," the room to make a telephone call. true because he had just ordered the Nixon said. "We've got a problem, and it's increased state of readiness, but had At 5:20 p.m. the bullet was re- now," Haig said, turning to Allen. "We done SO without telling Haig. moved from the president and the had better go upstairs and get this When Haig returned to the briefing straightened out." room, Weinberger was waiting. In a medical reports were positive. Baker Haig and Allen double-timed up- dramatic moment of angry but con- called the Situation Room and told stairs to the press room, which the trolled confrontation, Weinberger de- them they didn't have to worry them- secretary of state, who had undergone manded that Haig explain why he selves any more with the 25th open-heart surgery, later thought had said what he had in the briefing Amendment. might have accounted for-his subse- room. The two men kept their voices Meese called the vice president, quent shaky appearance on television. down, but their differences were clear whose plane was still an hour out of He reached the briefing podium at and sharp. Despite Haig's announce- Washington. 4:14 p.m. ment, Weinberger told him, he had Cradling the phone in his cabin In a voice cracking with emotion, he increased the readiness of American after he received the news, Bush told the nation and the world: "I just military forces. turned to his aides and said, "The wanted to touch upon a few matters "That's just what I said we weren't bullet's been removed. The operation associated with today's tragedy. First, doing," Haig said. was a success. The president is fine." as you know, we are in close touch "I didn't know you were going up It was now agreed at the hospital with the vice president, who is return- there," Weinberger replied, adding that the president's top aides should ing to Washington We have in- that he didn't think it "was appropri- split up. And it was also agreed that formed our friends abroad of the situ- ate" for Haig to be going before the any further briefings on the presi- ation, the president's condition, as we television cameras in the manner he dent's condition should be by the doc- know it [is] stable, now undergoing had done. For good measure, he also tors, even though this meant keeping surgery. And there are absolutely no said that Haig had misstated the the press waiting for another hour. alert measures at this time that we're order of presidential succession, Deaver and Nofziger, whose experi- contemplating." prompting Haig to respond: "You ence was an asset in White House should read the Constitution." press relations, remained at the hospi- tal, where Nofziger related the first of the Reagan jokes in surgery. Meese 6 went to the vice president's residence "Hi, Nancy," said Mrs. Brady, in a to brief Bush upon his arrival. manner that was strikingly composed, Meese met Bush at the residence, "We are just praying for both of and together they rode in an armored them." limousine back to the White House. Nofziger remained at the hospital to Meese had sent a helicopter for the brief reporters on Brady. At 9:30 p.m. vice president to Andrews Air Force he gave the first relatively optimistic Base, and a Bush aide had suggested report on Brady's condition. that the chopper fly directly to the White House. At 8:50 p.m. the president, with the "No, I don't want to do that," Bush anesthesia worn off, scribbled a notè said. "Only the president flies onto the to his doctors in the recovery room. South Lawn." "All in all, I'd rather be in Philadel- It was 7 p.m. when Bush arrived in phia," it said, in the words of a fa- the Situation Room. In rapid-fire mous movie line by W.C. Fields. order Allen ticked off an agenda that Everyone laughed. When the mes- had been discussed previously: the sage was relayed to the Situation president's health, an update on the Room, Smith said, "I know he's going world intelligence situation, the status to be all right." of U.S. military forces, the status of At 3 a.m. Tuesday, the tubes in what the press and public had been Reagan's mouth were removed. The told, the status of information given president's first words were about his privately to members of Congress, the assailant. - outlines of the statement which had "Boy, what's his beef?" Reagan been drafted for Bush, the question of asked. whether it was appropriate for Bush to visit Reagan at the hospital, infor- mation about Mrs. Reagan and the family, the cancellation of Bush's planned trip to Geneva and an update on the next day's schedule, which Bush would fulfill. At 7:30 p.m., with Brady still fighting for his life, Dr. Dennis O'Leary, clinical dean of George Washington, briefed the press. At 8:45 p.m., Meese, Baker and Weinberger met in Baker's office for a drink and a discussion of the next day. At about this time, Nancy Reagan left the hospital with their son, Ron, and his wife, Doria. In a corridor, she encountered the parents of the wounded Secret Service agent, and said gratefully that their son had saved her husband's life. McCarthy's father sobbed. Then, on the ground floor, she met Brady's mother, Doro- thy. THE WASHINGTON POST Sunday, April 5, 1981 The Day of the Jackal in Washington At the Hospital "Situation negative," the advance agent replied. At the shooting scene, agents had By Lou Cannon The quiet ended in the rapid fire of overwhelmed a young blond man later Washington Post Staff Writer a handgun and screams from the identified as John Warnock Hinckley It began as an ordinary spring day in crowd. Within nine seconds six shots Jr. They piled him into a police car Washington: light showers, the usual lines of had been fired in rapid succession at and took him away. tourists at the White House, a routine speech the presidential party. Before the limousine reached the by the president. One shot hit Secret Service agent hospital, nurses had cleared space in Then, gunfire. For six hours the nation Timothy J. McCarthy, who thrust the resuscitation bay for the shooting watched and wondered. Would the president himself between President Reagan victims. A first radio message has told live? Would he survive and be disabled? and the gunman, in the stomach. them there has been a shooting and Would the nation be plunged into constitu- One shot hit District police officer that "some men" have been hurt. A tional crisis? Thomas K. Delahanty in the neck. second message informed them that It was 2:24 p.m. Monday, March 31. Mi- One shot, although no one knew it one was the president of the United chael K. Deaver wasn't supposed to be at the immediately, bounced off the armored States. Washington Hilton. He was supposed to be limousine and hit Reagan in the chest, At 2:35 p.m. the limousine arrived back in the White House working on the penetrating his left lung. Yet another at George Washington. Reagan was president's schedule. But it was a busy day hit a window in a building across the feeling pain in his chest and was hav- at the office for chief of staff James A. Baker street and fragmented. ing difficulty breathing. As he got out III, and Deaver, his deputy, had volunteered And one shot, the shot that did the of the car, D.C. paramedic Roberto most damage, struck White House Hernandez recognized the limousine. to go in his place with President Reagan when he addressed the Building Trades press secretary Brady over the left On inaugural day he had been as- eye, penetrating his brain. Brady fell, signed to the ambulance that followed Council. No one noticed the gunman before the with blood gushing from his head. An the new president around Washing- advance man, Rick Ahearn, put a ton. firing began. No one particularly saw him, or white handkerchief under Brady's "I literally froze," Hernandez said knew he was there. On the sidewalk outside head. It quickly turned red with afterward. "I didn't believe what I was the lower entrance to the Washington Hilton, blood. actually seeing. I noticed he looked a Secret Service agent gave the routine radio, very pale and he had an apprehensive In a matter of seconds Parr had look about him The stare in his signal that all was clear. shoved Reagan into the limousine and eyes was like he was in a slight daze." It was 2:25 p.m. Deaver will never forget pulled the door shut. He commanded Reagan got out of the car. He what happened next. the driver, Drew Unrue, to pull away, walked to the emergency room, his "The president and I were walking out and the presidential limousine sped face drawn, Parr's arm around him. together," he recalls. "The press started ask- from the scene. A staff control car, Incredibly, no one had thought to ing their usual questions. I turned and with Deaver inside, followed. order a stretcher to be ready for him. moved [James S.] Brady up because he was When the president entered the emer- "You son-of-a-bitch, you broke my gency room, he fell to one knee. the press secretary. I took three steps, then rib," Reagan said to Parr inside the "I can't breathe," he said. the first shot went over my right shoulder. I limousine. He was joking, but he was For a moment the workers in the knew what it was. I ducked down, with the hurting from the blow. resuscitation bay were stunned. "Is help of a shove from a Washington police- Later in the week the president that who I think it is?" a nurse asked. man, who also was dropping to the ground. I would tell Deaver that he hadn't real- Then they sprang into action. Her- smelled the powder. I never saw the gun- ized he had been hit by a bullet but nandez removed Reagan's shoes, socks man." that he certainly knew he had been and pants while his partner Eric Sim- Secret Service agent Jerry Parr, head of hit. mons cut off his shirt. "It was a blow like I never felt," the presidential detail, never saw the gun- "All I could think of was Parkland," Reagan said. "It was like someone man, either. The gunman was shielded by Deaver said, referring to the Dallas hitting me with a hammer as hard as hospital where John F. Kennedy was the crowd. they could." taken. Secret Service agents had looked over this Parr, not knowing that the presi- crowd, as they always do. It is not easy to dent had been shot, originally ordered But Deaver, a short, quiet, patient spot a concealed gunman in a friendly crowd. the limousine to return to the White man who knows Reagan better than House. But when he saw Reagan anyone on the White House staff and Thirty seconds before the president arrived at the hotel, Parr had received a favorable coughing blood, the bright-red oxygen- was treated like a son by him, was situation report. ated blood that comes from the lung, busy with other matters. Cool and "Rawhide follow to Rawhide advance," he he and the president thought a rib collected, Deaver found a telephone had been broken by the protective bay outside the emergency ward and said, using the code word for the president. shove. Parr told Unrue to drive to called the White House. He reached "Situation report?" George Washington University Hospi- Margaret Tutwiler, the secretary to tal instead of the White House. He chief of staff Baker. -radioed the control car and told "Keep this line open, Margaret," he Deaver where he was going. said. "There's been a shooting, and the president's hurt. We don't think he was hit, but he may have broken a rib." -2- Gergen went to find White House At the White House counselor Edwin Meese III, the presi- Outside the resuscitation bay, At the White House they already dent's top aide, who was with his dep- Deaver and aide David Fisher kept knew about the shooting. But they uty, Craig Fuller. They already knew. the telephone lines open to the White did not know much about what had Baker ran down to the Secret Service House. Deaver had Nancy Reagan happened or that the president had command post in the basement to called immediately. He also asked been shot. find out what had happened. It was Tutwiler to tell his secretary to call. about 2:35 p.m., the time of Reagan's his wife, Carolyn, and tell her that he Baker had been working in his of- arrival at the hospital. was unharmed, but Deaver's secretary, fice through the morning. At 1 p.m. Shirley Moore, had already done so. he went to the White House mess to At the Hotel Meanwhile, Brady and McCarthy eat his usual lunch: a tunafish salad had arrived at the hospital, and Dela- Back at the Hilton, the ambulances sandwich and buttermilk. Brady and hanty had been taken to Washington had borne away the wounded men, his deputy, Larry Speakes, were fin- Hospital Center. Brady looked bad leaving behind the remnants of the ishing their lunch as Baker and Tut- and his blood pressure was dangerous- shooting: an umbrella, a dropped wiler arrived. They exchanged pleas- ly high. To the paramedics, McCarthy briefcase, the bloody sidewalk grate looked best of all. antries, and Brady said he was going where Brady fell. "Are you still with us?" a fellow to the Hilton for Reagan's speech. Prosperi, knowing that the presi- agent asked him. "Oh, yes," McCarthy The first word at the White House dential limousine had started out for quickly replied. that something had gone wrong came the White House, mistakenly believed At 2:36 p.m. Mrs. Reagan arrived in a telephone call from David Pros- the president had arrived there, and at the hospital. She wanted to see her peri, an assistant press secretary. He so informed the press. One eyewitness, husband immediately, but was told by was at the scene where the shots were Ramon Flores, attempted to convince Deaver that she could not. When she fired, and he saw Brady go down. Prosperi rushed into the hotel and skeptical reporters that Reagan had did get to see him, he greeted her grabbed the first telephone he found. been hit. He shrugged his shoulders with a line that may become a classic: It was a charge phone, so he gave the when they did not believe him. "Honey, I forgot to duck." operator the White House press office At the Hospital number and billed the call to his At the White House home telephone. Within minutes at George Washing- At the White House, events moved "Get me Larry. It's an emergency," ton the resucitation area was crowded swiftly. Tutwiler had left the first he said into the telephone. with members of the trauma team White House line open for Deaver, Speakes was just coming out of a and Secret Service agents. As Dr. then she rounded up Baker, Meese, meeting with other White House aides Dennis O'Leary related later, a nurse Gergen, Speakes and communications in the Roosevelt Room on the auto- trying to take Reagan's blood pressure director Frank Ursomarso, who were mobile regulation package that is to could not hear through the stetho- in a hall beyond the Oval Office. She be announced this week. Betsy scope because of the din and had to told them Deaver was on the tele- Strong, a press aide, ran up and told take it by feeling the pulse in phone. him Prosperi was calling. He picked Reagan's arm. It was only about 75 Baker went into his office and took up the phone of Kathy Ahern, low enough to signal that the presi- one phone. Meese picked up the other Brady's secretary. dent was in danger of shock. phone on the same line. Baker was at "The president has been shot at and Brady has been hit," Prosperi Quickly, trauma team members in- his desk. Deaver told them that the serted an intravenous tube and began president had been shot. said. running fluid into the president's "Shit," said Meese. "Thanks," Speakes replied, and veins. They took blood samples to "Oh, Jesus," said Baker. hung up. From the look on his face measure the blood oxygen content and Both men moved swiftly to do what the others in the room knew it was a to match Reagan's blood for a trans- was necessary. They agreed that the crisis. fusion. Meanwhile, they called for O- vice president had to be called, and "I don't know what it looked like, but it hit pretty hard," Speakes said. negative blood, the type that can be that the Cabinet should assemble in Ahern began to weep. given to anyone. Reagan's blood type the White House Situation Room. is O-positive. Secretary of State Alexander M. White House staff director David R. Gergen was coming out of the Dr. Joseph M. Giardano, the sur- Haig Jr. had called, and Baker called geon who heads the trauma team, was him back. same meeting Speakes had attended. The first instinct of both was to walk among the first to respond to the "It's very important how we handle page, and he saw Reagan within five this world-wide," Haig told Baker, out on the colonade and watch the motorcade return, which they ex- minutes of his arrival. By then, the who agreed. pected momentarily. Instead, Speakes president's blood pressure had risen to Treasury Secretary Donald T. telephoned Jack Warner of the Secret 100, but he was coughing up blood, Regan was the first Cabinet officer to his' breathing was fast and labored, reach Baker's office. Treasury is the Service. Warner knew something had and the surgeons had discovered the boss of the Secret Service, and Regan happened, but did not have the de- slit-like wound under his left arm. had been told of the incident within tails. Gergen ran down the corridor to Giardano said that the likelihood of two minutes of its occurrence. Regan Baker's office with the news. He burst a collapsed lung and the danger that, was on a long distance call from Los into the office, almost knocking down Reagan might be bleeding from his Angeles when the call came, and he Tutwiler, who had her back against heart or a major blood vessel made it hung up and went immediately by car the door. necessary to insert a chest tube at across the street to the White House. once. -3- At the hospital, Deaver put 'White Meanwhile, Dr. Neofytos T. Tsan- Aaron said he could feel splintering House physician Daniel Ruge on the garis, the hospital's acting chief of of the seventh rib where the bullet open line, and Baker took notes on staff, had been summoned from a had nicked it and ricocheted into the what Ruge told him: "He [the presi- meeting by a brief announcement: chest. Outside the left lung, he found dent] has received a chest wound in "The president of the United States is a large blood clot, and, after he re- the left chest. He is in stable condi- in the emergency room." Tsangaris moved it, he could see where the bul- tion. The blood pressure and pulse is said he quickly realized that three let had entered the lung. Quickly, he okay. He is alert and fighting. Next separate operating rooms, one for each examined the heart and the major stop could be the operating room. You shooting victim, must be readied at vessels nearby, They were untouched. ought to get right over here." once with nurses, technicians and All the bleeding was coming from the Haig arrived. Later, at the State equipment. smaller vessels within the torn lung. Department, a spokesman announced It was now 3:20 p.m. and Reagan "We began to feel around for the that Baker and Meese had left the was being prepared for surgery. He bullet and to our chagrin we could White House by the time Haig got had an oxygen mask over his face not find that bullet within the lung," there. It was an incorrect announce- when Baker saw him, but winked at he said later. Aaron ordered an X-ray ment. Regan, Baker and Tutwiler all his chief of staff. taken on the operating table. The bul- remember that Haig arrived just be- At 3:30 p.m., approximately 45 let was visible, embedded in a portion fore Baker and Meese left the office. minutes after he was been brought to of the left lung just behind the heart They talked briefly, and Meese and the hospital, he was wheeled to the and "flattened almost as thin as a Baker agreed that Haig would be the operating room. His bleeding had dime,' he said. "contact point" at the White House slowed somewhat, and he had received At last Aaron felt the bullet and while they were at the hospital. No a transfusion of five units of blood. pulled it out. Then he removed some one said anything about anyone being "Please tell me you're Republicans," of the dead lung tissue, inserted a "in control." But there was a brief he joked to the masked surgical team drain into the bullet's track, and discussion of the 25th Amendment, surrounding him. closed the incisions. The president providing for presidential succession, After that, according to operating had been in the operating room for because no one knew how badly room technician Michael Borowski, 3½ hours, and apparently was out of Reagan was hurt. Bush would be back who helped with instruments during danger. With a breathing tube in his by the time they knew, everyone the operation, the president was quiet. throat, and still on a respirator, the president was taken to the recovery agreed. "I saw Reagan looking around at ev- room. Meese told Tutwiler to get them a erybody busy doing their thing There had been anxious moments car. "I'll handle it," Regan said. He he recalled later. "I just kind of took his hand. He had sort of tears in his for Nancy Reagan during this opera- directed an agent to get them a siren- tion, moments she spent in a small equipped Secret Service car so they eyes He really had this look of appreciation on his face. That's what private office the hospital made avail- could speed through traffic to the hos- able to her and in the chapel, where pital. Speakes and Lyn Nofziger were really touched me." she met Sarah Brady, whose husband with Meese and Baker. The first part of the operation re- had been erroneously declared dead in Nofziger is a longtime Reagan aide quired a tiny incision below the navel. Into the incision Giordano inserted mid-afternoon reports on all three who proved -composed man in the television networks. day's crisis. He offered to help be- about a quart of salt solution to deter- For 53 minutes after the shooting cause "Brady is out of commission," mine whether any bullets had pene- not much was known at the White and everyone was happy to have him. trated the abdominal cavity and House press office. It wasn't until 3:18 He and Speakes are old adversaries, caused bleeding there. When sucked p.m. that communications director but they buried their differences on out again, the fluid was clear, indicat- Ursomarso stood on veteran press aide that bloody day. ing no abdominal injuries. Connie. Gerrard's chair in the upper Haig, Regan, Gergen and intergov- A report was given to Baker and press office to tell a packed crowed of ernmental relations aide Rich Wil- Deaver outside the operating room. reporters that Reagan had been shot. liamson went down to the Situation Nancy Reagan was told the good Every television set was turned on Room in the White House basement. news, and tears came to her eyes. as staff and reporters watched replay At the hospital Deaver alternated Borowski said Reagan was then after replay. The room was full of his time between Nancy Reagan and turned on his right side and redraped people who work with Brady every the telephones. The grim mood was for the more major operation, the to- day, and the replays, particularly lightened on one occasion when a hos- racotomy. Assisted by Dr. Kathleen those in, slow motion, made all who pital clerk with a green form in his Cheyney, Dr. Benjamin L. Aaron cut were present think that his chances hand ran around trying to get some a six-inch incision through the skin for survival were slight. information on the patient. "Who is parallel with the ribs, extending hori- Some aides wept for their fallen he?" the clerk wanted to know. zontally from below the left arm to- press secretary. It was pouring rain "R-e-a-g-a-n," Deaver spelled out. ward the center of the chest. Then he outside now, and correspondents who "You are kidding," the clerk said. used retractors to spread the ribs usually would have broadcast from "I'm not kidding," said Deaver. apart. the White House lawn stood on chairs in the briefing room to get above the heads of their milling colleagues and talked to fill air time. -4- At 3:37 p.m. Gergen appeared in phone line to Air Force Two, and Some knew they were talking for the crowded briefing room. Haig was guarded in his communica- posterity, but others didn't even no- "Good afternoon," he said. "This is to confirm the statements made at tion. He also had a very poor connec- tice the recorders. What the men in tion. the Situation Room wanted to know George Washington hospital that the "I think you should come directly were three things: how badly was the president was shot once in the left back to Washington," Haig said. president hit? Was the shooting a side this afternoon as he left the hotel. "There's been an incident." He also conspiracy or an individual act? His condition is stable. told Bush that he would be sending Would Brady survive? "A decision is now being made him a message over the coded Telex While first reports from the hospi- whether or not to operate to remove machine that is the only secure chan- tal seemed to be positive, everyone in the bullet. The White House and the nel of communications between Air the Situation Room was aware that vice president are in communication. Force Two and the ground. the president was 70 years old and And the vice president is now en Bush hung up and turned to his faced major surgery. They were trying route to Washington." aides. "We are going directly back to to prepare for every contingency. On Air Force Two Washington," he said. "I just spoke to Smith and Fielding briefed the Haig." It was a quarter of an hour Cabinet members on constitutional Going to Washington had not been later before he learned what had hap- succession and on the 25th Amend- George Bush's plan. On a day of rou- pened. ment, which spells out the procedures tine politicking, he had slipped into "Mr. Vice President, in the incident for the vice president's assuming office his blue, Eisenhower-style official you will have heard about by now, the in case of presidential disability. The flight jacket, buckled his seatbelt and president. was struck in the back," the review was brief, because the Cabinet settled back for a moment of relax- Telex from Haig said. "Medical au- members spent much of the time on ation as his plane took off from Fort thorities are deciding now whether or the telephone and, like millions of Worth at 2:41 p.m. EST for a short not to operate. Recommend you re- other Americans, before the television hop to Austin. turn to D.C. at earliest possible mo- set. Behind him was a speech to cattle- ment." Of those in the Situation Room, men and the dedication of the former Quickly, the word was passed Smith knew Reagan best. He is Hotel Texas as a national monument through the plane. House Majority Reagan's long-time attorney, a charter - it was the hotel where John F. Leader Jim Wright (D-Tex.) walked member of the "kitchen cabinet" and Kennedy had spent his last night be- into the front cabin, and Bush turned a close friend. He also has jurisdiction fore that fatal trip to Dallas. Ahead, to him and said, "Why in the world over the FBI, and was on the tele- in Austin, awaited an address to the would anybody shoot a man like Ron- phone immediately, checking on Texas Legislature and a news confer- ald Reagan?" Hinckley. ence. Air Force Two did not have enough The readout from the FBI showed Air Force Two was still climbing, a fuel on board to make it to Washing- that the suspect carried psychiatrists' couple of minutes later, when Edward ton nonstop, so the plane landed in cards in his pocket, which convinced Pollard, head of the vice president's Austin as scheduled, but only for refu- them that he probably was acting on Secret Service detail, took an urgent eling. Bush stayed on board, sipping his own. message from the Fort Worth office. on a diet cola and saying very little. Smith was outwardly calm, but his He was told of the assassination at- thoughts, like Deaver's, went back to tempt, and was told that the presi- At the White House the day John F. Kennedy was shot dent had not been hit. And he also At the White House, Cabinet mem- and the pall it cast over the nation. was informed, incorrectly, that two bers and other high White House offi- He was relieved to hear that Reagan Secret Service agents were down. Pol- cials assembled in the Situation was trying out one-liners on the doc- lard immediately relayed this message Room: Attorney General William tors, knowing, as he would say later, to Bush. French Smith, Defense Secretary "that this was a sign of normalcy." Bush nodded quietly and began Caspar W. Weinberger, Transporta- Weinberger had been told by his talking of the possibility of shortening tion Secretary Drew Lewis, National secretary that he was wanted at the his Austin stopover. The telephone Security Council staff director Richard Situation Room. At first, he couldn't line flashed again. This time it was V. Allen, domestic adviser Martin An- find a car, and thought of taking a Bush's press secretary, Peter Teeley, derson, CIA Director William J. taxi, but CIA Deputy Director Bobby with a message identical to the one Casey, counsel Fred Fielding. Hours Inman was visiting him, and he of- Pollard had given. later, Commerce Secretary Malcolm; fered to take the defense secretary to The vice president's chief legislation Baldrige would arrive. the White House. aide, Robert V. Thompson, rushed There were so many people rushing When Weinberger arrived, Haig was back to the VIP section in mid-plane back and forth that Allen tried to making telephone calls on the only and announced to the assembled close the door to the Situation Room secure phone in the Situation Room, Bush aides and three Texas congress- to keep some of the staff members Weinberger stepped outside to call men that an attempt had been made out. Allen put a tape recorder on the Gen. David Jones, chairman of the on the president's life. table in the center of the room along Joint Chiefs of Staff. They discussed Up front, at 3:04 p.m., Haig tele- with another that was already there. the combat-readiness of American phoned Bush. There is no secure tele- forces, and Weinberger, after receiving unspecified classified information on a little white slip of paper, directed Jones to order "a little higher state of readiness," but one that was short ofa full alert. -5- Other Cabinet members were mak- Haig was then asked who was mak- ing similar determinations in their Afterward, both Haig and Weinber- ing decisions for the government at ger would try to minimize the ex- areas of responsibility. the time, and responded, "Constitu- Regan told Treasury Undersecre- change, which lasted only a few tionally, gentlemen, you have the minutes. Haig responded to criticisms tary for Monetary Affairs Beryl president, the vice president and the Sprinkel to tell the Federal Reserve of his appearance by saying that he secretary of state, in that order, and that the dollar should be supported was winded from running up the should the president decide he wants stairs. on foreign exchange markets. After- to transfer the helm to the vice presi- ward, Regan described his action as "a "I may have been quivery, but I've dent, he will do so. He has not done been through 50 times worse than normal procedure that has been done that. As of now, I am in control here, that," he said. before" when some crisis threatens the in the White House, pending return of dollar's value. the vice president and in close touch At the Hospital The order meant that the Federal with him. If something came up, I Reserve bought dollars with other cur- would check with him, of course." At the hospital, Haig's impromptu rencies, though not in massive Haig's appearance astounded Baker briefing was one of the bad moments amounts. and Meese, who were watching at the for the watching White House aides. The attention of the officials in the hospital. And it flabbergasted Haig's An even worse one came in the press Situation Room then turned to the colleagues in the Situation Room, room when the television networks none of whom had been consulted incorrectly announced Brady's death. television set, which showed Speakes before he left on his self-appointed Some aides were furious. Others wept in the press room fending off ques- mission. silently as they continued to work. tions. He hadn't been told much, and "What's Al doing up there?" asked Baker, however, knew better than some of the questions concerned pos- Lewis. the networks. He had just had a re- sible emergency actions the nation Weinberger, returning from his tele- port that Brady was holding his own, was taking in the crisis. He was asked phone call to Jones, looked up and and he called the Situation Room and the key question of whether the U.S. saw Haig on the screen and asked, told them to disregard the report. military had been placed on higher "Why are they running that old tape Hospital interns who heard the re- readiness. of Al Haig?" ports asked the surgeon operating on "Not that I'm aware of," Speakes It's not a tape, he was told. Haig's Brady if he hadn't heard that his pa- replied. up there. tient was dead. His response drew criticism from "He can't be, he was right here," At about 4:30 p.m. former president both Weinberger and Haig, but the said Weinberger, still disbelieving. As Richard M. Nixon called the hospital, secretary of state was especially agi- he watched, Haig told reporters in the asking for Nancy Reagan. She was tated. He said that "the next time briefing room that no change in mili- unable to come to the telephone, but someone opens their yap" they had tary alert procedures was contem- Baker did. better make sure that what they are plated. "Please convey my concern that I saying is true. Weinberger then left Weinberger knew that this was un- know is shared by all Americans," the room to make a telephone call. true because he had just ordered the Nixon said. "We've got a problem, and it's increased state of readiness, but had At 5:20 p.m. the bullet was re- Haig said, turning to Allen. "We done so without telling Haig. moved from the president and the had better go upstairs and get this When Haig returned to the briefing straightened out." room, Weinberger was waiting. In a medical reports were positive. Baker Haig and Allen double-timed up- dramatic moment of angry but con- called the Situation Room and told stairs to the press room, which the trolled confrontation, Weinberger de- them they didn't have to worry them- secretary of state, who had undergone manded that Haig explain why he selves any more with the 25th open-heart surgery, later thought had said what he had in the briefing Amendment. might have accounted for-his subse- room. The two men kept their voices Meese called the vice president, quent shaky appearance on television. down, but their differences were clear whose plane was still an hour out of He reached the briefing podium at and sharp. Despite Haig's announce- Washington. 4:14 p.m. ment, Weinberger told him, he had Cradling the phone in his cabin In a voice cracking with emotion, he increased the readiness of American after he received the news, Bush told the nation and the world: "I just military forces. turned to his aides and said, "The- wanted to touch upon a few matters "That's just what I said we weren't bullet's been removed. The operation associated with today's tragedy. First, doing," Haig said. was a success. The president is fine." as you know, we are in close touch "I didn't know you were going up It was now agreed at the hospital with the vice president, who is return- there," Weinberger replied, adding that the president's top aides should ing to Washington We have in- that he didn't think it "was appropri- split up. And it was also agreed that formed our friends abroad of the situ- ate" for Haig to be going before the any further briefings on the presi- ation, the president's condition, as we television cameras in the manner he dent's condition should be by the doc- know it [is] stable, now undergoing had done. For good measure, he also tors, even though this meant keeping surgery. And there are absolutely no said that Haig had misstated the the press waiting for another hour. alert measures at this time that we're order of presidential succession, Deaver and Nofziger, whose experi- contemplating." prompting Haig to respond: "You ence was an asset in White House should read the Constitution." press relâtions, remained at the hospi- tal, where Nofziger related the first of the Reagan jokes in surgery. Meese went to the vice president's residence to brief Bush upon his arrival. "Hi, Nancy," said Mrs. Brady, in a Meese met Bush at the residence, manner that was strikingly composed, and together they rode in an armored "We are just praying for both of them." limousine back to the White House. Meese had sent a helicopter for the Nofziger remained at the hospital to vice president to Andrews Air Force brief reporters on Brady. At 9:30 p.m. Base, and a Bush aide had suggested he gave the first relatively optimistic that the chopper fly directly to the report on Brady's condition. White House. "No, I don't want to do that," Bush At 8:50 p.m. the president, with the anesthesia worn off, scribbled a note said. "Only the president flies onto the South Lawn." to his doctors in the recovery room. "All in all, I'd rather be in Philadel- It was 7 p.m. when Bush arrived in phia," it said, in the words of a fa- the Situation Room. In rapid-fire mous movie line by W.C. Fields. order Allen ticked off an agenda that Everyone laughed. When the mes- had been discussed previously: the sage was relayed to the Situation president's health, an update on the world intelligence situation, the status Room, Smith said, "I know he's going to be all right." of U.S. military forces, the status of At 3 a.m. Tuesday, the tubes in what the press and public had been Reagan's mouth were removed. The told, the status of information given president's first words were about his privately to members of Congress, the assailant. outlines of the statement which had been drafted for Bush, the question of "Boy, what's his beef?" Reagan asked. whether it was appropriate for Bush to visit Reagan at the hospital, infor- mation about Mrs. Reagan and the family, the cancellation of Bush's planned trip to Geneva and an update on the next day's schedule, which Bush would fulfill. At 7:30 p.m., with Brady still fighting for his life, Dr. Dennis O'Leary, clinical dean of George Washington, briefed the press. At 8:45 p.m., Meese, Baker and Weinberger met in Baker's office for a drink and a discussion of the next day. At about this time, Nancy Reagan left the hospital with their son, Ron, and his wife, Doria. In a corridor, she encountered the parents of the wounded Secret Service agent, and said gratefully that their son had saved her husband's life. McCarthy's father sobbed. Then, on the ground floor, she met Brady's mother, Doro- thy.