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==Assassination==
==Assassination==
Four hours after the polling stations closed in California, Robert F. Kennedy claimed victory in that state's Democratic presidential primary. Shortly after Midnight [[Pacific time zone|PDT]] on [[June 5]], [[1968]] Senator Kennedy addressed his campaign supporters from a lectern atop a makeshift platform in the Embassy Room ballroom of the [[Ambassador Hotel]], located in the [[Mid-Wilshire]] district of Los Angeles. At 12:15 a.m. [[Pacific time zone|PDT]], immediately after delivering his victory statement, Kennedy stepped from the lectern, exited the rear of the platform while passing through a set of curtains, and walked through a backstage anteroom and its doorway to a back corridor behind the ballroom. Kennedy then turned right and followed the path of the narrow corridor into a kitchen pantry, where he continued shaking hands with well-wishers and hotel staff. In that pantry, at 12:16 a.m. [[Pacific time zone|PDT]], a 24-year-old man named [[Sirhan Sirhan]] stepped in front of the Senator and fired toward the candidate and his entourage from an eight-shot handgun, later identified as a [[.22 caliber]] [[Iver Johnson#Robert Kennedy assassination|Iver-Johnson Cadet]] [[revolver]].<ref>Sirhan is reported by some to have exclaimed "Kennedy, you son of a bitch!," {{cite web | author=Thom White | year=2005 | title=RFK Assassination Far From Resolved | url=http://www.citizinemag.com/politics/politics_0506_rfk_twhite.htm | work=[http://www.citizinemag.com/ CITIZINEmag] | accessdate=February 16 | accessyear=2007}}, but most witnesses did not recall hearing him say anything.</ref>
===Event===

Four hours after the polling stations closed in California, Robert F. Kennedy claimed victory in that state's Democratic presidential primary. At approximately 12:15am [[Pacific time zone|PDT]], Kennedy addressed his campaign supporters in the Embassy Room ballroom of the [[Ambassador Hotel]], located in the [[Mid-Wilshire]] district of Los Angeles.<ref name=LAFiles>{{cite news|url=|title=Senator Robert F. Kennedy Assassination FBI - Los Angeles County District Attorney Files|accessdate=2008-04-27}} <nowiki>http://www.paperlessarchives.com/rfk_assassination.html</nowiki> ([[URL]])</ref>As he exited, accompanied by others through the kitchen exit, a 24-year-old man named [[Sirhan Sirhan]] stepped in front of the Senator and fired several times with a revolver later identified as a [[.22 caliber]] [[Iver Johnson#Robert Kennedy assassination|Iver-Johnson Cadet]].<ref>{{cite web | author=Thom White | year=2005 | title=RFK Assassination Far From Resolved | url=http://www.citizinemag.com/politics/politics_0506_rfk_twhite.htm | work=[http://www.citizinemag.com/ CITIZINEmag] | accessdate=February 16 | accessyear=2007}}</ref>
Hotel assistant [[maître d']]s Karl Uecker and Edward Minasian, writer [[George Plimpton]], [[Olympic Games|Olympic]] gold medal [[decathlon|decathlete]] [[Rafer Johnson]] and [[American football|professional football]] player [[Rosey Grier]] were among several people who helped to subdue, disarm and detain Sirhan. Sirhan had already fired the remaining bullets of his eight-shot handgun during the struggle by the time Grier jammed Sirhan's thumb behind the trigger of the [[revolver]] to prevent further shots from being fired. Grier had no way of knowing in the confusion that all the revolver's bullets had been fired.

As Kennedy lay wounded on the floor of the hotel kitchen pantry, busboy Juan Romero cradled the Senator's head and placed a [[rosary]] in his hand<ref>{{cite web | author=Steve Lopez | year=1998 | title=Guarding the Dream | url=http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,988470,00.html | work=[http://www.time.com/ TIME] | accessdate=August 16 | accessyear=2007}}</ref>. This became the [[iconic]] image of the assassination.<ref name="Picture">{{cite web |date=2007 |url=http://americanhistory.si.edu/militaryhistory/exhibition/zoomify.asp?id=1746&type=g&width=640&height=480&hideAlt=1|title = title|format = PICTURE|publisher = [http://americanhistory.si.edu american history]| accessdate = 2007-08-19 | last= |quote=}}</ref>

Kennedy had been shot once behind his right ear at very close range and bullet fragments were dispersed throughout his brain. Two other bullets entered at the rear of his right armpit. One exited from his chest and the other lodged in the back of his neck.<ref>Moldea, Dan E., ''The Killing of Robert F. Kennedy'' (Norton 1995), p. 85.</ref> A fourth shot had passed through the Senator's clothing. Reporters and others crammed the narrow kitchen pantry, trying to gather information, as television film cameramen and print photographers captured the images of the bleeding Kennedy lying on the pantry floor, surrounded by pandemonium.

Over the next 25 1/2 hours, television and radio broadcast live coverage, as Kennedy aide [[Frank Mankiewicz]] provided several updates at Good Samaritan Hospital on the dying Senator's condition. TV and radio aired live Mankiewicz's announcement, at 1:59 a.m. [[Pacific time zone|PDT]] on [[June 6]], that Kennedy had died 15 minutes earlier, at 1:44 a.m. [[Pacific time zone|PDT]].

==Other victims==
Initially, there were conflicting reports about the number of bystanders shot. Eventually it was confirmed that five people other than Kennedy were wounded: William Weisel of [[ABC News]], Paul Schrade of the [[United Auto Workers]] union, Democratic Party activist Elizabeth Evans, Ira Goldstein of the Continental News Service and Kennedy campaign volunteer Irwin Stroll. All but Stroll, the youngest of the shooting victims, are alive today.

At least two other people were accidentally injured by being struck in the face by camera equipment. Although not physically wounded, singer [[Rosemary Clooney]], a strong supporter of Kennedy, was present in the ballroom during the shooting in the pantry and suffered a nervous breakdown shortly afterward;<ref name="Clooney">{{cite web |date=2002 |url = http://web.archive.org/web/20020701-20020830re_/http://www.cincypost.com/2002/jul/01/rostim070102.html|title = Rosemary Clooney: 1928-2002|format = HTML |publisher = [http://www.cincypost.com cincy post]| accessdate = 2008-04-01 }}</ref> two of Clooney's children also witnessed the shooting aftermath in the ballroom, including Hollywood actor [[Miguel Ferrer]], who was 13 at the time.

==Television and radio coverage==
Although Senator Kennedy's speech in the ballroom had been broadcast live on television and radio, the shooting in the kitchen pantry was not aired live, nor was it videotaped or filmed. None of the huge television cameras that were used in those days to relay live pictures were stationed inside the pantry when the shots erupted there; these cameras were set up in other areas of the Ambassador Hotel, such as the Embassy Room ballroom where Kennedy had made his speech, the Ambassador Room ballroom one floor below and the lobby area. Some cameramen with shoulder-carried film cameras were able to get inside the pantry moments after the shooting but the film cameramen could only record the shooting aftermath images onto film, not relay those images live.

The ABC television network had been in the process of signing off when word of the shooting arrived. A staff announcer awkwardly advised stations to stand by for further word from the network while ABC News anchor [[Howard K. Smith]] and political analyst Bill Lawrence received confirmation in New York concerning the situation in Los Angeles. Within moments, ABC was back on the air with Smith announcing to viewers news of the Kennedy shooting at 12:21 a.m. [[Pacific time zone|PDT]].

Moments later, ABC aired a live audio report from KABC TV reporter Carl George, inside the kitchen pantry, beginning just before Kennedy was wheeled from the kitchen on a gurney. A visibly shaken ABC News producer-correspondent Dave Jayne provided details on the wounds to his colleague Bill Weisel, an ABC associate director, who had been among bystanders also shot. Both Jayne and Weisel had been standing near the pantry's swinging doors, several feet from Kennedy, at the time of the shooting.

ABC's primary correspondent at the Ambassador, Bob Clark, had heard the shots from the Embassy Room and rushed to the pantry, where he observed a wounded Robert Kennedy lying on the pantry floor. Clark then rushed back to the ballroom to call his network's headquarters in New York. Coincidentally, Clark had been the ABC reporter riding in the [[Dallas]] motorcade during the [[assassination of John F. Kennedy]] and now became the only person ever to see both wounded Kennedy brothers just moments after each was shot. After speaking by phone with ABC News anchor Howard K. Smith, Clark was dispatched to Central Receiving Hospital much as he had been rushed to [[Parkland Hospital]] in his press follow-up car five years earlier. After Senator Kennedy was transferred to Good Samaritan Hospital, less than an hour after the shooting, Clark began providing live reports on Kennedy's condition from Good Samaritan.

On [[National Broadcasting Company|NBC]], newsman [[Charles Quinn]] had been wrapping up a live television report from the hotel's Embassy Room at the very moment Kennedy and others were being shot inside the kitchen pantry. Quinn, unaware of the shooting, tossed back to NBC anchor [[Frank McGee (journalism)|Frank McGee]] in Burbank as previously planned. The network originally had intended for McGee to then toss to co-anchors [[Chet Huntley]] and [[David Brinkley]] for a few moments and for McGee to finally close out the program. Word of a possible shooting at the Ambassador changed those plans and, instead of wrapping up NBC's primary coverage, the anchors stretched their on-air comments while off-air efforts were made to confirm the alarming information. When NBC believed it had sufficient confirmation that a shooting indeed had occurred, the network switched back to the hotel at 12:26 a.m. [[Pacific time zone|PDT]] for live pictures of what was now a chaotic scene there while McGee broke the news to viewers. NBC then began its own live coverage of the shooting aftermath.

Within moments, an out of breath Quinn reported that he had just left Kennedy and that the Senator had been shot in the head, prompting McGee to exclaim, "In the head?" NBC's [[Sander Vanocur]] reported that he had been upstairs in the Kennedy suite at the time of the shooting and had quickly gone downstairs to the Embassy Room ballroom. In an NBC interview room adjacent to the ballroom, Vanocur interviewed witnesses including Sandra Serrano, who claimed to have seen a woman in a polka dot dress running down an outside stairway while saying, "We've shot him! We've shot him! We've shot Senator Kennedy."<ref>Moldea, Dan E., ''The Killing of Robert F. Kennedy'' (Norton 1995), pp. 70-71</ref> In addition to Quinn and Vanocur, correspondent Lew Allison also reported from the Ambassador, while [[Jack Perkins]] provided live remote reports from Good Samaritan Hospital. In the coming days, NBC provided the most coverage of the three major television networks, 55 hours in all compared to 43 hours by ABC and 42 hours by CBS.<ref>"What Was Going On," ''Time'', June 14, 1968, p. 74.</ref>

CBS Television had concluded its live anchored coverage of the California primary an hour before Kennedy was shot. Some staffers were at a bar near the network's New York headquarters when they learned of the shooting, and CBS did not begin coverage across the network until approximately 12:38 a.m. [[Pacific time zone|PDT]].<ref>What Was Going On," ''Time'', June 14, 1968, p. 72.</ref> ''CBS Morning News'' anchor [[Joseph Benti]] headed up the coverage from New York, assisted initially by [[Mike Wallace (journalist)|Mike Wallace]]. [[Walter Cronkite]], who had gone home after anchoring the network's primary coverage until 11:15 p.m. [[Pacific time zone|PDT]], eventually joined Benti as co-anchor on the network's California primary set in New York. CBS newsman [[Roger Mudd]], who had been at the Ambassador covering the primary along with fellow correspondent [[Terry Drinkwater]], followed the ambulance to Central Receiving Hospital where Kennedy was first taken, providing an on-air report by telephone and reflecting notable calm despite his personal friendship with Kennedy and Kennedy's wife, Ethel. Mudd then went to Good Samaritan Hospital, to which Kennedy was transferred, to continue his reporting.
Although CBS was off the air at the time of the shooting, it had continued providing a live, un-anchored network feed directly from the Ambassador Hotel so that CBS affiliates, particularly those in California, could air the live pictures if they wished. CBS continued feeding live pictures of the Embassy Room ballroom in the moments after Kennedy had concluded speaking and had left the lectern, although it is believed that only a few CBS affiliates, if any at all, were still airing the feed in those first moments after the Senator's speech. In those initial moments, CBS cameras panned the crowd in that ballroom as well as another crowd of supporters gathered downstairs in the hotel's Ambassador Room ballroom. The Embassy Room crowd was dispersing following Kennedy's victory statement, while the Ambassador Room crowd was milling and chanting, "RFK! RFK! RFK!" in anticipation that the Senator was about to come downstairs to address them as well.

As microphones picked up the sound of supporters in the lower Ambassador Room chanting "Kennedy, Kennedy, rah, rah, rah! Kennedy, Kennedy, shish, boom, bah!", a CBS camera upstairs showed supporters in the Embassy Room reacting to the shooting that had just taken place, off-camera, in the kitchen pantry just off the Embassy Room.

While CBS's audio feed switched from the Ambassador Room to match the pictures of alarm in the Embassy Room, the upper ballroom's northside service doors leading to the pantry could be seen swinging open and the sounds of screaming and chaos could be heard. It was clear that the joyous crowd was now overcome with confusion and, in some cases, panic.

CBS News correspondent [[Terry Drinkwater]], standing at the lectern where Kennedy had just spoken, asked someone what had happened. An unidentified man answered, "Somebody said he's been shot". Drinkwater then advised his CBS colleagues to make sure they were rolling videotape. From the lectern, supporters called out for doctors, and Kennedy's brother-in-law Stephen Smith (with wife Jean Kennedy Smith at his side) calmly asked the crowd to leave the room.

Reporter Andrew West of [[KRKD]], a [[Mutual Broadcasting System]] radio affiliate in [[Los Angeles]], captured on audio tape the sounds of the immediate aftermath of the shooting but not the actual shooting itself. Using a reel-to-reel tape recorder and attached microphone, West also provided an on-the-spot account of the struggle with Sirhan Sirhan in the hotel kitchen pantry, shouting at Rafer Johnson to "Get the gun, Rafer, get the gun!" and telling others to "get ahold of [Sirhan's] thumb and break it, if you have to! Get his thumb!" <ref name="Audio">{{cite web |date= [[June 5]], [[1968]]|url = http://hearitnow.umd.edu/1968.htm|title = Hear it Now! RFK ASSASSINATED|format = AUDIO|publisher = [http://hearitnow.umd.edu Hear it Now!]| accessdate = 2007-08-19 | last=Andrew West of KRKD }}</ref>.

Earlier, while still on the ballroom stage just after Kennedy's speech, West had briefly asked the Senator how he would overcome Vice President [[Hubert Humphrey]]'s lead in obtaining delegate commitments to the Democratic National Convention. In a response that seems somewhat garbled in West's recording, Kennedy indicated he knew that a "struggle" still lay ahead of him in his quest for his party's presidential nomination. Following the Senator's response to West's question, the radio reporter switched his tape recorder off. Moments later, as West was following the Kennedy party into the kitchen area, the reporter heard what sounded like balloons popping, followed by a scream and then shouts that Kennedy had been shot. West quickly turned his tape recorder back on, recording the immediate aftermath of the assassination but just missing the actual shots that had just been fired.

In 2004, an audio recording of the RFK shooting, made by freelance newspaper reporter Stanislaw Prusynski, came to light. For more details about it, see Disputes and Contentions below.

==Disputes and Contentions==
<!-- Commented out because image was deleted: [[Image:Wiki_uclalat_1429_b751_281223E-1.jpg|thumb|left|Ballistics test on Sirhan B. Sirhan's gun, 1975]] -->


There seems to be no dispute that Sirhan fired his revolver, and Sirhan is alleged to have admitted as much privately.<ref> While in prison, Sirhan allegedly described to Michael McCowan, an investigator who had been hired by Sirhan's defense team, meeting eyes with Kennedy just before shooting him. Asked by McCowan why he hadn't shot Kennedy between the eyes, Sirhan allegedly replied, "Because [he] turned his head at the last second." Moldea, Dan E., ''The Killing of Robert F. Kennedy'' (Norton 1995), p. 326.</ref> What is disputed is whether any of Sirhan's bullets actually hit Senator Kennedy, whether Sirhan had planned and acted alone or was assisted by another gunman at the scene, and whether Sirhan fired bullets or blanks. As with Robert's brother [[John F. Kennedy assassination|John's assassination]] in 1963, the Senator's death has been analyzed by many who have developed various alternative scenarios for the crime, or who argue there are serious problems with the official case.
There seems to be no dispute that Sirhan fired his revolver, and Sirhan is alleged to have admitted as much privately.<ref> While in prison, Sirhan allegedly described to Michael McCowan, an investigator who had been hired by Sirhan's defense team, meeting eyes with Kennedy just before shooting him. Asked by McCowan why he hadn't shot Kennedy between the eyes, Sirhan allegedly replied, "Because [he] turned his head at the last second." Moldea, Dan E., ''The Killing of Robert F. Kennedy'' (Norton 1995), p. 326.</ref> What is disputed is whether any of Sirhan's bullets actually hit Senator Kennedy, whether Sirhan had planned and acted alone or was assisted by another gunman at the scene, and whether Sirhan fired bullets or blanks. As with Robert's brother [[John F. Kennedy assassination|John's assassination]] in 1963, the Senator's death has been analyzed by many who have developed various alternative scenarios for the crime, or who argue there are serious problems with the official case.
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{{Cquote2|Until more is precisely known…the existence of a second gunman remains a possibility. Thus, I have never said that Sirhan Sirhan killed Robert Kennedy.| Dr. Noguchi <ref name="Noguchi">{{cite web |date=2007 |url = http://www.crimelibrary.com/terrorists_spies/assassins/kennedy/5.html?sect=19|title = The Autopsy|format = HTML |publisher = [[Crime Library]]| accessdate = 2007-08-19 | last=Joseph Geringer}}</ref><ref name="NoguchiBook">{{cite book | last = Thomas Noguchi| authorlink = AUTHORLINK| title = Coroner | year = [[December 3]], [[1985]]| publisher = Pocket |language=English| isbn= 0671624938}}</ref>}}
{{Cquote2|Until more is precisely known…the existence of a second gunman remains a possibility. Thus, I have never said that Sirhan Sirhan killed Robert Kennedy.| Dr. Noguchi <ref name="Noguchi">{{cite web |date=2007 |url = http://www.crimelibrary.com/terrorists_spies/assassins/kennedy/5.html?sect=19|title = The Autopsy|format = HTML |publisher = [[Crime Library]]| accessdate = 2007-08-19 | last=Joseph Geringer}}</ref><ref name="NoguchiBook">{{cite book | last = Thomas Noguchi| authorlink = AUTHORLINK| title = Coroner | year = [[December 3]], [[1985]]| publisher = Pocket |language=English| isbn= 0671624938}}</ref>}}


Independent testing (shown in a 2004 "Unsolved History" series program on the [[Discovery Channel]]) indicates that gunpowder residue can easily travel over {{in to cm|15}}, but that the [[stippling]] effect observed requires that the gun must have been less than {{in to cm|2|precision=0}} away. In any case, none of the witnesses whose recollections are credited with establishing the distance between Kennedy and Sirhan's gun reported seeing anyone else's gun 1.5 inches from Kennedy's head.<ref>Security guard Thane Eugene Cesar did pull a revolver, and Don Schulman, a runner for a local television station, even said he saw Cesar fire the gun at Sirhan, Moldea, Dan E., ''The Killing of Robert F. Kennedy'' (Norton 1995), pp. 146-47, but no one reported seeing another gun so close to Kennedy's head. If there was a second, unseen, gunman, he apparently was in Sirhan's line of fire and eluded the people who surrounded Sirhan and grabbed his arm while he was still firing.</ref> Thus, there are three possibilities: (1) the autopsy's estimate of the distance between Kennedy's head and the gun from which the bullets came was inaccurate, (2) the memories of eyewitnesses were inaccurate, or (3) someone other than Sirhan fired a gun 1.5 inches from Kennedy's head without being seen by the approximately 30 people in the room.
===Perpetrator===
{{mainarticle|Sirhan Sirhan}}
{{wikisource|Sirhan Sirhan's diary}}
Sirhan Sirhan was a Jordanian immigrant aged 24 at the time of the assassination<ref name=BST>{{cite web|url=http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,838860,00.html|title=Behind Steel Doors| publisher=TIME |date=1969-01-17 |accessdate=2008-04-27}}</ref>, who was known to be strongly opposed to [[Zionism]]<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,841578,00.html|title=Selectivity In Los Angeles|publisher=TIME|date=1969-01-31|accessdate=2008-04-27}}</ref>. A diary police found at Sirhan's home stated, "My determination to eliminate RFK is becoming more and more of an unshakable obsession. RFK must die. RFK must be killed. Robert F. Kennedy must be assassinated. .... Robert F. Kennedy must be assassinated before [[5 June]] [[1968]]." It has been suggested that the date of the assassination is significant, because it was the first anniversary of the first day of the [[Six Day War]] between Israel and its Arab neighbors that began on [[June 5]], [[1967]].<ref>'''The Copycat Effect'' New York: Paraview Pocket-Simon and Schuster, 2004, ISBN 0-7434-8223-9</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://crimemagazine.com/05/sirhansirhan,0906-5.htm|title=Part II: Why Sirhan Sirhan Assassinated Robert Kennedy by Mel Ayton|publisher=crimemagazine.com|work=Crime magazine: An encyclopedia of crime|accessdate=2008-04-26|date=2005-09-06|last=Ayton|first=Mel }}</ref>


===Pruszynski recording===
During his subsequent trial, Sirhan's lawyers attempted to use a defence of diminished responsibility<ref name=BST />, whilst their client attempted to confess to the crime and change his plea to guilty on several occasions.<ref name=ADI>{{cite web|url=http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,839767-2,00.html|title=A Deadly Iteration|publisher=TIME|date=1969-03-07|accessdate=2008-04-27}}</ref> During the trial, Sirhan testified that he had killed Kennedy "with 20 years of malice aforethought", although he has maintained since being convicted that he has no memory of the crime. The judge did not accept this confession and it was later withdrawn.<ref name=ADI /><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.signonsandiego.com/news/state/20030306-2018-ca-sirhanparole.html|title=Sirhan Sirhan denied parole for 12th time|work=[[Associated Press]]|publisher=www.signonsandiego.com|accessdate=2008-04-26|date=2003-03-06|last=Skoloff|first=Brian}}</ref>
Decades after the assassination, it was discovered that the shots in the kitchen pantry had been recorded on audio tape by [[Stanislaw Pruszynski]], a freelance newspaper reporter who was covering Senator Kennedy's presidential campaign for the ''[[Montreal Gazette]]'' and today resides in his native [[Poland]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://guides.travelchannel.com/warsaw/dining/european/central-european/137880.html|title=Destination Guides: Warsaw|publisher=[[The Travel Channel]]}}</ref> Pruszynski had made the recording with a battery-powered portable cassette tape recorder and an attached microphone. Pruszynski's tape is the only known sound recording of the assassination, and analysis of it has only just begun.

At the [[American Academy of Forensic Sciences]] annual meeting in Washington, D.C. on February 21, 2008, Philip M. Van Praag of PVP Designs in Tucson, Arizona, presented his conclusions concerning the Pruszynski tape, which he asserted provides a record of a second gun being fired in the assassination.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.guardian.co.uk/science/2008/feb/22/kennedy.assassination|title=New evidence challenges official picture of Kennedy shooting|publisher=[[The Guardian]]|author=James Randerson|date=[[2008-02-22]]|accessdate=2008-02-23}} the Academy plans to publish Van Praag's paper later in the year.

On [[June 6]], [[2007]], the newly-discovered Pruszynski recording was the centerpiece for a television program about the Kennedy case on [[Discovery Times]] Channel, now known as [[Investigation Discovery]] Channel. The one-hour documentary, entitled ''Conspiracy Test: The RFK Assassination'',<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.prnewswire.com/cgi-bin/stories.pl?ACCT=109&STORY=/www/story/06-04-2007/0004601320|title=Discovery Times Channel Reveals Previously Unknown Audio of Robert Kennedy's Death in CONSPIRACY TEST: THE RFK ASSASSINATION|publisher=PRNewswire|year=2007|accdessdate-2007-11-29}}; </ref> provided evidence from the recording that convicted gunman Sirhan Sirhan had not acted alone. Pruszynski's audio tape, which had never been broadcast in the 39 years since the murder, was aired for the first time during the [[Discovery Times]] program. According to three out of four audio experts interviewed for the documentary, the reporter's recording reveals that a second gun was fired in the Bobby Kennedy shooting.

Stanislaw Pruszynski and his recording equipment were approximately 40 feet southwest of Senator Kennedy when the shots erupted inside the [[Ambassador Hotel]] kitchen pantry. Pruszynski was unaware that his portable machine was still operating as it captured the sounds of the Kennedy shooting. Pruszynski also was unaware of the shooting itself because it was taking place amidst the various sounds of celebration, some distance away inside another room and outside the reporter's purview.
At that moment, Pruszynski was about to enter a narrow back corridor leading into the pantry from the hotel’s Embassy Room, a ballroom where Kennedy had just delivered his victory statement following the Tuesday, [[June 4]] California Democratic primary election. When the shooting commenced, Pruszynski was at the north side of the ballroom and descending a small set of steps at the east end of the ballroom's makeshift stage where the Senator had spoken. Although he did not know his recorder was still recording at that point, Pruszynski just happened to be holding his microphone tilted upward and pointed toward the pantry, and above the heads of the crowd on the ballroom floor beneath him. Doors between Pruszynski and the shooting were open at the time.

Film and video shot by more than one camera in the Embassy Room&mdash;in particular, an [[ABC-TV]] [[black and white]] [[video-relay camera]]—captured pictures of Pruszynski, his recorder and microphone in hand, as he descended the ballroom platform's east steps, departed the steps and proceeded toward the kitchen pantry precisely while the shooting was taking place off-camera, inside the pantry. As the Kennedy shooting continued in the pantry, Pruszynski continued moving in the ballroom toward the corridor that accessed the pantry, getting his microphone closer to the shooting but still unaware of the shots erupting in that other room.

Pruszynski's audio recording captured a number of rapidly occurring sounds, each one very short in duration and with something of a popping or even clapping quality. "Conspiracy Test" quoted four audio experts who analyzed the Pruszynski recording: Philip Van Praag and Wes Dooley in the [[United States]], Eddie Brixen in [[Denmark]] and Philip Harrison in the [[United Kingdom]]. Van Praag, Dooley and Brixen determined that the tape had captured at least 10 gunshots&mdash;and possibly as many as 13 shots—in the RFK assassination; all other possible sources for the sounds, including popping balloons, ricochets, echoes, etc., were ruled out. The presence of at least 10 shots is highly significant because Sirhan's [[handgun]] could fire no more than eight shots at a single time. Sirhan possessed only the one revolver and had no opportunity to reload his weapon once the shooting erupted in the pantry. If the Pruszynski recording does indeed reflect more than eight shots fired, it establishes the existence of a second gunman.

Harrison dissented on the issue of number of shots, reporting that he was able to confirm only seven or eight shots in the Pruszynski recording. The [[Discovery Times]] program explained that Harrison had not been provided all of the information and materials that had been made available to the other three experts. While all four experts bypassed a crude cassette copy of the Pruszynski recording that had been created years before by the [[California State Archives]] in [[Sacramento, California|Sacramento]], only the first three experts worked directly from several high-quality digital and analog master dubs of the recording. Harrison relied on a digital copy of just one of those master dubs. Unlike at least two of the other experts, Harrison did not know where Pruszynski and his microphone were located during the Kennedy shooting and was unaware that Pruszynski and his microphone were moving toward the shots as they were being fired. In the [[Discovery Times]] TV program, Harrison conceded, "Any information relating to where Mr. Pruszynski was standing at the time or any movements he made during the sequence of shots would, to some degree, have been of assistance."

The Pruszynski recording's importance rests not only upon the number of shots fired but also upon two additional evidence: the intervals between the shots and differing acoustic characteristics.

Two of the four audio experts reported that the Pruszynski recording contains evidence of a second gunman firing virtually simultaneously with Sirhan. They determined&mdash;and a firearms expert concurred&mdash;that there was at least one set of so-called "double-shots," and possibly two sets. In the one set of "double-shots" that these experts confirmed for "Conspiracy Test", the set's twin shots were fired too close together for both to have come from Sirhan's revolver. The shooting's two separate sets of "double-shots"&mdash;that is, the third and fourth shots in the first set and the seventh and eighth shots in the second set&mdash;were separated by 122 and 149 milliseconds respectively. In field tests, a trained firearms expert firing under ideal conditions could only manage 366 milliseconds between shots using the same weapon. The dissenting Philip Harrison did not address this key issue of shot intervals.

In addition to the "double-shot" findings, one of the [[Discovery Times]] audio experts, Philip Van Praag, reported to the [[AAFS]] in 2008 that five of the shots heard in the recording&mdash;3, 5, 8, 10 and 12 in a sequence of 13 shots&mdash;had odd acoustic characteristics which the expert attributed to their being fired from a second gun pointing away from Pruszynski's microphone. In his scientific paper on the Pruszynski recording, Van Praag reported to the [[AAFS]] that a forensic investigation had matched the anomalous acoustic characteristics to those of a [[Harrington & Richardson]] .22 firearm known as the H&R Model 922.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.guardian.co.uk/science/2008/feb/22/kennedy.assassination|title=New evidence challenges official picture of Kennedy shooting|publisher=[[The Guardian]]|author=James Randerson|date=[[2008-02-22]]|accessdate=2008-02-23}}</ref> Sirhan's weapon in the pantry was a [[.22 caliber]] [[Iver Johnson#Robert Kennedy assassination|Iver-Johnson Cadet]].
The significance of the Pruszynski recording was unknown for 36 years until early 2004, when an American journalist obtained a copy of the California State Archives's crude cassette dub of the original recording. The original is the only audio recording known to have captured the actual Robert Kennedy shooting. Two other sound recordings made that night by newsmen Andrew West of [[Mutual Broadcasting System]] radio affiliate [[KRKD]] and Jeff Brent of the [[Continental News Service]] did not capture the shooting itself but recorded only the shooting's immediate aftermath.

[[Discovery Times]]'s "Conspiracy Test" concluded by posing this question: "Will the continuing respect for Robert Kennedy and the new evidence of a second gunman lead to a re-opening of the RFK assassination?" One of the program's audio experts answered it this way: "My feeling about the evidence that's come up here is that you can't back away from real stuff. It merits closer examination. And as a citizen of this country, [I believe] it has to be looked at."

===Suppression or coverup?===
[[James Scott Enyart]] has claimed he was actively photographing the inside of the Ambassador Hotel kitchen pantry at the moment of the shooting. Furthermore he contends that his three, 36-exposure rolls were confiscated by the [[Los Angeles Police Department|LAPD]] and sealed by court-order for 20 years, and never returned in full which resulted in a lengthy court battle, from 1989 to 1996. The most important piece of photographic evidence, allegedly featuring the scenes of the Senator falling and bullet holes in the door frame and ceiling, were confined in 10 pictures found to be missing from the third negative. The Enyart trial was, from the start, surrounded by a series of blunders, including tampering with evidence in the archives, in addition to the disappearance of a large amount of related court files, and ultimately the missing negative and stolen first-generation prints. <ref name="enyart">{{cite web |date=Thursday, [[January 18]], [[1996]] |url = http://homepages.tcp.co.uk/~dlewis/enyart.htm|title = New Twist in Kennedy Mystery|format = HTML |publisher =[[Los Angeles Times]] | accessdate = 2007-08-19 | last=EMI ENDO and ERIC MALNIC TIMES STAFF WRITERS |quote=}}</ref> Enyart eventually won the trial against the city of Los Angeles and the LAPD and was consequently granted a financial settlement of $450,000. Among Enyart's principal witnesses were Sirhan’s official researchers such as Lynn Mangan and Ted Charach. <ref name="name">{{cite web |date=2007 |url = http://www.sirhansresearcher.com/|title = Sirhan’s Researcher|format = HTML |publisher = [http://www.sirhansresearcher.com/ www.sirhansresearcher.com]| accessdate = 2007-08-19 | last= Rose Lynn Mangan|quote=Photos of the RFK assassination. Jamie Scott Enyart, who was behind and to the left of RFK during the shooting, took a series of photos of the event. His film was immediately confiscated by L.A.P.D. officers and was sealed for 20 years. When the seal was lifted in 1988, Enyart applied for the return of his film and was only given prints of photos from the same roll that were taken before he entered the pantry. The ten photos that he took in the pantry during the assassination were reported to be lost. I testified at Enyart’s trial on his behalf (see p. 36 of Special Exhibit 10 Report), and I clearly demonstrated the flat out falsification of evidence by the L.A.P.D. The jury later awarded him a settlement of $450,000. A letter of from Scott’s attorneys expressing thanks for my help is on p.35 of the Special Exhibit 10 Report. For more details, I refer you to pp.245-246 of William Turner’s book, “Rearview Mirror,” published by Penmarin Books, 2001, ISBN #1883955211. The chapter referenced in this book also contains a conclusion by former forensics acoustics expert Dr. Michael H. L. Hecker of the Stanford Research Institute in Menlo Park, CA, that his analysis of three audio tapes from the night of the shooting (i.e., the Andrew West, Jeff Brent and ABC TV recordings) indicate that “no fewer than ten gunshots are ascertainable following the conclusion of the Senator’s victory speech until after the time that Sirhan was disarmed.” Sirhan’s gun was only capable of firing eight rounds.}}</ref> <ref name="Dr. Michael H. L. Hecker">{{cite web |date=2008 |url = http://www.anopenandshutcase.com/|title = An Open & Shut Case|format = HTML|publisher = [http://www.anopenandshutcase.com/ www.anopenandshutcase.com]| accessdate = 2008-02-28. Michael Hecker's conclusion that the West, Brent and Smith/ABC TV recordings captured shots was wrong. Both Dr. Joling and Dr. Hecker now acknowledge this error and Dr. Hecker has rescinded his statement of November 13, 1982. This means that only the Pruszynski recording is known to have captured the shots and, according to Van Praag's and Joling's findings, the Pruszynski recording captured 13 shots. See Pages 255-256 of Joling's and Van Praag's book, Epilogue Part I: Errors, Omissions and Sundry Happenings}}</ref>

Sandra Serrano, a young Kennedy campaign worker, said that during questioning, she was intimidated by police and forced to change her story. The official LAPD transcript of her polygraph interview seems to show that she was pressured to change her statement.
<ref name="Serrano">{{cite web |date=2007 |url = http://www.crimelibrary.com/terrorists_spies/assassins/kennedy/6.html?sect=19|title = Robert Kennedy Assassination: Revisions and Rewrites |publisher = [[Crime Library]]| accessdate = 2007-12-06 | last=Joseph Geringer |quote=Because Serrano was the most adamant about the existence of the phantom lady, she was turned over to a Sgt. Enrique Hernandez for in-depth questioning on the topic. The interview lasted more than an hour and, badly shaken from the almost-accusatory nature of the interview, she took and failed a polygraph (lie detector) test.}}</ref>

==Conspiracy theories==
Although no one has found evidence of a link between Sirhan and any co-conspirator, the circumstances of the assassination have given rise to beliefs in some quarters that someone else must have been involved. If someone other than Sirhan fired the bullet that killed Kennedy, who was it?

===The security guard===
For decades, researchers have identified Thane Eugene Cesar as the most likely candidate for a second gunman in the RFK assassination. Cesar had been employed by Ace Guard Service to protect Robert Kennedy at the Ambassador Hotel. This was not his full-time job. During the day he worked as a maintenance plumber at the Lockheed Aircraft plant in Burbank, a job that required a security clearance from the Department of the Defense. He worked there from 1966 until losing his job in 1971. According to researcher Lisa Pease, Cesar had formerly worked at the Hughes Aircraft Corporation, but author Dan Moldea wrote that Cesar began working at Hughes in 1973, a job he held for seven years and a position Cesar said required the second highest clearance level at the plant.<ref>Moldea, Dan E., ''The Killing of Robert F. Kennedy'' (Norton 1995), pp. 200-01.</ref>

Cesar was a Cuban American who supported segregationist [[George Wallace]] for President. He appeared to have no specific job at Lockheed and apparently had "floating" assignments and often worked in off-limits areas which only special personnel had access to.{{Fact|date=April 2008}} According to some researchers {{weasel word}} , these areas were under the control of the CIA.{{Fact|date=April 2008}}

When interviewed, Cesar admitted that he pulled a gun at the scene of the shooting but insisted the weapon was a Rohm .38, not a .22, the caliber of the bullets found in Kennedy. He also claimed that he got knocked down after the first shot and did not get the opportunity to fire his gun. The LAPD, which interviewed Cesar shortly after the shooting, did not regard Cesar as a suspect and did not ask to see his gun.<ref>Moldea, Dan E., ''The Killing of Robert F. Kennedy'' (Norton 1995), p. 149.</ref>
Cesar admitted that he did own a .22-caliber H & R pistol, and he showed it to LAPD sergeant P. E. O'Steen on June 24, 1968.<ref>Moldea, Dan. E., ''The Killing of Robert F. Kennedy'' (Norton 1995), pp. 151-52.</ref> When the LAPD interviewed Cesar three years later, however, he claimed that he had sold the gun before the assassination to a man named Jim Yoder. William W. Turner tracked down Yoder in October, 1972. Yoder still had the receipt for the H & R pistol, which was dated September 6, 1968, and bore Cesar's signature. Cesar therefore had sold the pistol to Yoder three months after Kennedy's assassination despite Cesar's claim in 1971 that he had sold the weapon months before the murder.<ref>Moldea, Dan. E., ''The Killing of Robert F. Kennedy'' (Norton 1995), pp. 151-52.</ref> Author Dan Moldea wrote that that Cesar submitted years later to a polygraph examination performed by Edward Gelb, former president and executive director of the American Polygraph Association. Moldea reported that Cesar denied any involvement in Kennedy's assassination and passed the test with flying colors.<ref>Moldea, Dan E., The Killing of Robert F. Kennedy (Norton 1995), pp. 280-290.</ref>

===The woman in the polka-dot dress===
Kennedy campaign worker Sandy Serrano claimed a young Hispanic man and a young Caucasian woman wearing a "polka dot" dress burst from a southwest exit of the Ambassador Hotel's Embassy Room ballroom moments after the shooting, giggling and exclaiming, "We shot him." When she asked them "Who?" the young woman answered, "Senator Kennedy!" The two then walked into a hotel parking lot where an elderly couple named Bernstein saw them, still laughing and saying, "We shot Kennedy."<ref name="crimelib">crimelibrary.com, ''[http://www.crimelibrary.com/terrorists_spies/assassins/kennedy/6.html Robert F. Kennedy assassination]'', retrieved 27 February 2008</ref> The Bernsteins flagged down LAPD officer Paul Sharaga, who issued an [[all points bulletin]] for the young couple but this was canceled without explanation by his superiors. Serrano said she was later coerced by police into changing her story.<ref name="crimelib"/> Researchers have pored over photographs and television pictures from the scene and found women wearing dresses that might be perceived as bearing polka dots, but no likely assassin has been identified.

===CIA operatives===
On [[November 20]], [[2006]], the [[BBC]]'s ''[[Newsnight]]'' presented research by Shane O'Sullivan alleging that several [[Central Intelligence Agency|CIA]] officers were present on the night of the assassination. On [[November 20]], [[2007]], O'Sullivan released a video documentary entitled ''RFK Must Die'', providing an update on his investigation and findings.


The CIA had no domestic jurisdiction, and some of the officers were based in Southeast Asia at the time, with no apparent reason to be in Los Angeles. Three of those accused were former senior officers who had worked together in 1963 at [[JMWAVE]], the CIA's main anti-Castro station based in Miami.
The CIA had no domestic jurisdiction, and some of the officers were based in Southeast Asia at the time, with no apparent reason to be in Los Angeles. Three of those accused were former senior officers who had worked together in 1963 at [[JMWAVE]], the CIA's main anti-Castro station based in Miami.


JMWAVE Chief of Operations [[David Sánchez Morales|David Morales]], Chief of Maritime Operations [[Gordon Campbell]] and Chief of Psychological Warfare Operations [[George Joannides]] were identified by former acquaintances in photographs taken at the Ambassador Hotel on [[June 5]], [[1968]]. Among those acquaintances was Congressional investigator Ed Lopez, who worked with Joannides while the latter was serving as CIA liaison to the Congressional investigation into the assassination of John F. Kennedy.
==Media coverage==
As the shooting took place, ABC News was signing off from its electoral broadcast, whilst CBS had already moved on to broadcasting late night movies<ref name=mediaaccount>{{cite web|url=http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,900149,00.html|title=What Was Going On?|publisher=TIME|date=1968-06-14|accessdate=2008-04-28}}</ref> and it was 21 minutes after the shots that CBS's coverage of the shooting would begin. The reporters who had been present to report on Kennedy's win in the primary election ended up crowding into the kitchen where he had been shot<ref name=EventAccount /> and the only means of recording the event was by audio recording or by recording using cameras with no live transmission capability. Thus, film footage of the aftermath of the incident could not be broadcast until two hours after the incident when CBS and NBC had had time to develop their recorded films.<ref name=mediaaccount />


According to close associates of Morales, he was known for his deep anger with the Kennedys for what he saw as their betrayal during the [[Bay of Pigs Invasion]]. Morales' former attorney Robert Walton quoted Morales as having said, "I was in Dallas when we got the son of a bitch and I was in Los Angeles when we got the little bastard." O'Sullivan reported that the CIA declined to comment on the officers in question.
According to close associates of Morales, he was known for his deep anger with the Kennedys for what he saw as their betrayal during the [[Bay of Pigs Invasion]]. Morales' former attorney Robert Walton quoted Morales as having said, "I was in Dallas when we got the son of a bitch and I was in Los Angeles when we got the little bastard." O'Sullivan reported that the CIA declined to comment on the officers in question.
Line 73: Line 162:
O'Sullivan concludes by asking rhetorically whether the two employees, named by their Bulova employee names in the documentary, based on their being labeled on the back of L.A.P.D. evidence photos demonstrating they had been investigated and interviewed briefly by the police at the time of the assassination, could have been using other names, "Campbell" and "Joannides", in their supposed CIA roles, with the Bulova jobs as cover. The documentary also reveals, however, that the man identified as "Campbell", under his real name, advanced to become a "well-respected" and well-known man in Bulova and the watch industry generally by the late 1970's.
O'Sullivan concludes by asking rhetorically whether the two employees, named by their Bulova employee names in the documentary, based on their being labeled on the back of L.A.P.D. evidence photos demonstrating they had been investigated and interviewed briefly by the police at the time of the assassination, could have been using other names, "Campbell" and "Joannides", in their supposed CIA roles, with the Bulova jobs as cover. The documentary also reveals, however, that the man identified as "Campbell", under his real name, advanced to become a "well-respected" and well-known man in Bulova and the watch industry generally by the late 1970's.


In the end, O'Sullivan's documentary is inconclusive about a CIA presence at the hotel. Whether Sirhan, however, was "handled", brainwashed, manipulated or hypnotized as a "Manchurian candidate", is extensively explored by the documentary, but in the end is loaned no more than speculation by the effort. The analysis, however, is at once intriguing and even plausible.
When interviewed, Cesar admitted that he pulled a .38-caliber revolver at the scene of the shooting. He eventually acknowledged that he owned a .22-caliber revolver such as Sirhan used and showed it to LAPD sergeant P. E. O'Steen on June 24, 1968.<ref>Moldea, Dan. E., ''The Killing of Robert F. Kennedy'' (Norton 1995), pp. 151-52.</ref> Cesar submitted years later to a polygraph examination performed by Edward Gelb, former president and executive director of the American Polygraph Association, which asserted that Cesar denied any involvement in Kennedy's assassination and the polygraph test indicated that he was telling the truth.<ref>Moldea, Dan E., The Killing of Robert F. Kennedy (Norton 1995), pp. 280-290.</ref>


Robert Kennedy, ironically, had spent the previous night before the shooting at the home of supporter and friend, director John Frankenheimer, director of both "Seven Days in May" and "The Manchurian Candidate".
Robert Kennedy, ironically, had spent the previous night before the shooting at the home of supporter and friend, director John Frankenheimer, director of both "Seven Days in May" and "The Manchurian Candidate".


==Sirhan's motivations==
===General "second gunman" theories===
{{wikisource|Sirhan Sirhan's diary}}
The autopsy indicated that the fatal shot to Kennedy had come from behind him, but eyewitness accounts suggested that Sirhan had only ever fired from in front of Kennedy.<ref name=guardian>{{cite web| url=http://www.guardian.co.uk/science/2008/feb/22/kennedy.assassination| title=New evidence challenges official picture of Kennedy shooting|date=2008-02-22|accessdate=2008-04-28|author=James Randerson}}</ref> This led to the suggestion that there was a second gunman in the vicinity who actually fired the fatal shot, a possibility supported by the coroner Thomas Noguchi.<ref name="NoguchiBook">{{cite book | last = Thomas Noguchi | title = Coroner | year = [[December 3]], [[1985]]| publisher = Pocket |language=English| isbn= 0671624938}}</ref> During a reexamination of the case in 1975, however, the Supreme Court ordered expert examination of the possibility of a second gun having been used, and the conclusion of the experts was that there was little or no evidence to support the existence of a second gun.<ref name = fbipart1b>{{cite web| url=http://foia.fbi.gov/rfkasumm/rfksumm1b.pdf| title=Robert F. Kennedy Assassination(Summary) - Part 1(b)|accessdate=2008-04-28}}</ref>
Consider the possibility that the man grabbed at the scene firing a gun was responsible for Kennedy's death. What could have motivated a young man to alter history in such a horrible way? A diary police found at Sirhan's home, allegedly penned by Sirhan himself, had stated, "My determination to eliminate RFK is becoming more and more of an unshakable obsession. RFK must die. RFK must be killed. Robert F. Kennedy must be assassinated. .... Robert F. Kennedy must be assassinated before [[5 June]] [[1968]]." According to author [[Loren Coleman]], <ref>'''The Copycat Effect'' New York: Paraview Pocket-Simon and Schuster, 2004, ISBN 0-7434-8223-9</ref> the date of the assassination is significant, because it was the first anniversary of the first day of the [[Six Day War]] between Israel and its Arab neighbors that began on [[June 5]], [[1967]]. Kennedy had voiced support for Israel, and Coleman suggests Sirhan saw himself as a Palestinian militant. Sirhan's shooting of Kennedy, Coleman writes, has been characterized as one of the first acts of Palestine or Arab terrorism to take place on American soil.


==Legacy==
More recently, analysis of audio recordings of the shootings taken by freelance reporter Stanislaw Pruszynski appear, according to forensic expert Philip van Pragg, to indicate thirteen shots being fired, whilst Sirhan's gun only held eight.<ref name=guardian /> Whilst this would be highly supportive of a second gunman, further independent analysis by a series of other experts indicates that there are only eight shots present on the tape.<ref> Harrison, P. (2007) ‘Analysis of “The Pruszynski Tape”’ (report on recording of gunshots). In Ayton, M., ''The Forgotten Terrorist: Sirhan Sirhan and the Assassination of Robert F. Kennedy.'' Washington: Potomac Books.</ref>
The assassination of Robert Kennedy is part of a series of events in the 1960s that led to the demoralizing and alienation of many people in the political centre-left in the United States. These events began with the [[John F. Kennedy assassination|assassination of President John F. Kennedy]] in 1963 and included the 1968 [[Martin Luther King, Jr. assassination|assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King]], culminating in the violence of the [[1968 Democratic National Convention]] in [[Chicago]] where police brutally assaulted anti-Vietnam war demonstrators.<ref>[http://www-cgi.cnn.com/ALLPOLITICS/1996/conventions/chicago/facts/chicago68/index.shtml Brief History of Chicago's 1968 Democratic Convention] from Allhistory, [[CNN]] and ''Time''.]</ref> It is unclear whether Robert Kennedy, had he not been assassinated, would have gone on to become the Democratic presidential nominee. At the time of his death, Kennedy was far behind Vice President [[Hubert Humphrey]] in convention delegate support, which Humphrey had gathered through commitments from party bosses outside the presidential primary system.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.guardian.co.uk/comment/story/0,,1999999,00.html|title=Would Robert Kennedy have been president?|publisher=[[The Guardian]]|author=Kerridge, Steven|date=[[2007-01-27]]|accessdate=2007-11-26}}</ref> This fact, however, has not deterred many from the belief that Kennedy had indeed wrapped up the nomination by his victory in the California primary.<ref>Thomas, Evan. ''Robert Kennedy: His Life.'' (New York: Simon & Schuster, 2000), p. 24</ref> Following Kennedy's June 1968 assassination in Los Angeles, Humphrey continued gathering delegate commitments from the party bosses and was nominated in Chicago. Humphrey went on to lose a very close [[1968 presidential election]] to Republican [[Richard Nixon]].


==Bibliography==
==Bibliography==

Revision as of 17:49, 26 April 2008

File:Robertkennedy.jpg
Robert Kennedy

Senator Robert F. Kennedy, brother of slain President John F. Kennedy, was assassinated in June 1968 while running for President. Kennedy was shot shortly after Midnight on June 5 after addressing supporters celebrating his victory in the California primary. He died a day later. At the scene of the shooting, Kennedy aides and supporters surrounded a man and grabbed his arm while he continued shooting. That man, a 24-year-old Palestinian named Sirhan Sirhan, claimed in court on March 3, 1969, that he had killed Kennedy, but he has since denied any memory of the night's events. He sought a new trial as late as 1998.[1]

Background

The 1968 election was held against a backdrop of social unrest in the United States. The incumbent president, Lyndon Johnson had won the election of 1964 with a landslide of the popular vote [2], but faced problems during this term of office involving rioting within the ghettos of major cities despite his attempts at introducing anti-poverty and anti-discrimination legislation[3] and opposition to military action in Vietnam. Further social unrest was caused by the assassination of Martin Luther King, Jr. in April 1968, which led to rioting in 100 cities[4]

Robert Kennedy had been appointed to the position of United States Attorney General in January 1961 and remained in this post until he resigned on September 3 1964 in order to run for election as a United States Senator[5]. He took office on January 3, 1965.

Kennedy entered the race for the Democratic Party's nomination for President in 1968 after Senator Eugene McCarthy received 42% of the vote in New Hampshire primary against the incumbent Lyndon Johnson's 49%[6]. Following a series of electoral battles for convention delegates, Kennedy was still in second place in the race for the candidacy with 393 delegates compared to the leader Hubert Humphrey who had 561. These results are the ones following the June 4 California primary.

Assassination

Four hours after the polling stations closed in California, Robert F. Kennedy claimed victory in that state's Democratic presidential primary. Shortly after Midnight PDT on June 5, 1968 Senator Kennedy addressed his campaign supporters from a lectern atop a makeshift platform in the Embassy Room ballroom of the Ambassador Hotel, located in the Mid-Wilshire district of Los Angeles. At 12:15 a.m. PDT, immediately after delivering his victory statement, Kennedy stepped from the lectern, exited the rear of the platform while passing through a set of curtains, and walked through a backstage anteroom and its doorway to a back corridor behind the ballroom. Kennedy then turned right and followed the path of the narrow corridor into a kitchen pantry, where he continued shaking hands with well-wishers and hotel staff. In that pantry, at 12:16 a.m. PDT, a 24-year-old man named Sirhan Sirhan stepped in front of the Senator and fired toward the candidate and his entourage from an eight-shot handgun, later identified as a .22 caliber Iver-Johnson Cadet revolver.[7]

Hotel assistant maître d's Karl Uecker and Edward Minasian, writer George Plimpton, Olympic gold medal decathlete Rafer Johnson and professional football player Rosey Grier were among several people who helped to subdue, disarm and detain Sirhan. Sirhan had already fired the remaining bullets of his eight-shot handgun during the struggle by the time Grier jammed Sirhan's thumb behind the trigger of the revolver to prevent further shots from being fired. Grier had no way of knowing in the confusion that all the revolver's bullets had been fired.

As Kennedy lay wounded on the floor of the hotel kitchen pantry, busboy Juan Romero cradled the Senator's head and placed a rosary in his hand[8]. This became the iconic image of the assassination.[9]

Kennedy had been shot once behind his right ear at very close range and bullet fragments were dispersed throughout his brain. Two other bullets entered at the rear of his right armpit. One exited from his chest and the other lodged in the back of his neck.[10] A fourth shot had passed through the Senator's clothing. Reporters and others crammed the narrow kitchen pantry, trying to gather information, as television film cameramen and print photographers captured the images of the bleeding Kennedy lying on the pantry floor, surrounded by pandemonium.

Over the next 25 1/2 hours, television and radio broadcast live coverage, as Kennedy aide Frank Mankiewicz provided several updates at Good Samaritan Hospital on the dying Senator's condition. TV and radio aired live Mankiewicz's announcement, at 1:59 a.m. PDT on June 6, that Kennedy had died 15 minutes earlier, at 1:44 a.m. PDT.

Other victims

Initially, there were conflicting reports about the number of bystanders shot. Eventually it was confirmed that five people other than Kennedy were wounded: William Weisel of ABC News, Paul Schrade of the United Auto Workers union, Democratic Party activist Elizabeth Evans, Ira Goldstein of the Continental News Service and Kennedy campaign volunteer Irwin Stroll. All but Stroll, the youngest of the shooting victims, are alive today.

At least two other people were accidentally injured by being struck in the face by camera equipment. Although not physically wounded, singer Rosemary Clooney, a strong supporter of Kennedy, was present in the ballroom during the shooting in the pantry and suffered a nervous breakdown shortly afterward;[11] two of Clooney's children also witnessed the shooting aftermath in the ballroom, including Hollywood actor Miguel Ferrer, who was 13 at the time.

Television and radio coverage

Although Senator Kennedy's speech in the ballroom had been broadcast live on television and radio, the shooting in the kitchen pantry was not aired live, nor was it videotaped or filmed. None of the huge television cameras that were used in those days to relay live pictures were stationed inside the pantry when the shots erupted there; these cameras were set up in other areas of the Ambassador Hotel, such as the Embassy Room ballroom where Kennedy had made his speech, the Ambassador Room ballroom one floor below and the lobby area. Some cameramen with shoulder-carried film cameras were able to get inside the pantry moments after the shooting but the film cameramen could only record the shooting aftermath images onto film, not relay those images live.

The ABC television network had been in the process of signing off when word of the shooting arrived. A staff announcer awkwardly advised stations to stand by for further word from the network while ABC News anchor Howard K. Smith and political analyst Bill Lawrence received confirmation in New York concerning the situation in Los Angeles. Within moments, ABC was back on the air with Smith announcing to viewers news of the Kennedy shooting at 12:21 a.m. PDT.

Moments later, ABC aired a live audio report from KABC TV reporter Carl George, inside the kitchen pantry, beginning just before Kennedy was wheeled from the kitchen on a gurney. A visibly shaken ABC News producer-correspondent Dave Jayne provided details on the wounds to his colleague Bill Weisel, an ABC associate director, who had been among bystanders also shot. Both Jayne and Weisel had been standing near the pantry's swinging doors, several feet from Kennedy, at the time of the shooting.

ABC's primary correspondent at the Ambassador, Bob Clark, had heard the shots from the Embassy Room and rushed to the pantry, where he observed a wounded Robert Kennedy lying on the pantry floor. Clark then rushed back to the ballroom to call his network's headquarters in New York. Coincidentally, Clark had been the ABC reporter riding in the Dallas motorcade during the assassination of John F. Kennedy and now became the only person ever to see both wounded Kennedy brothers just moments after each was shot. After speaking by phone with ABC News anchor Howard K. Smith, Clark was dispatched to Central Receiving Hospital much as he had been rushed to Parkland Hospital in his press follow-up car five years earlier. After Senator Kennedy was transferred to Good Samaritan Hospital, less than an hour after the shooting, Clark began providing live reports on Kennedy's condition from Good Samaritan.

On NBC, newsman Charles Quinn had been wrapping up a live television report from the hotel's Embassy Room at the very moment Kennedy and others were being shot inside the kitchen pantry. Quinn, unaware of the shooting, tossed back to NBC anchor Frank McGee in Burbank as previously planned. The network originally had intended for McGee to then toss to co-anchors Chet Huntley and David Brinkley for a few moments and for McGee to finally close out the program. Word of a possible shooting at the Ambassador changed those plans and, instead of wrapping up NBC's primary coverage, the anchors stretched their on-air comments while off-air efforts were made to confirm the alarming information. When NBC believed it had sufficient confirmation that a shooting indeed had occurred, the network switched back to the hotel at 12:26 a.m. PDT for live pictures of what was now a chaotic scene there while McGee broke the news to viewers. NBC then began its own live coverage of the shooting aftermath.

Within moments, an out of breath Quinn reported that he had just left Kennedy and that the Senator had been shot in the head, prompting McGee to exclaim, "In the head?" NBC's Sander Vanocur reported that he had been upstairs in the Kennedy suite at the time of the shooting and had quickly gone downstairs to the Embassy Room ballroom. In an NBC interview room adjacent to the ballroom, Vanocur interviewed witnesses including Sandra Serrano, who claimed to have seen a woman in a polka dot dress running down an outside stairway while saying, "We've shot him! We've shot him! We've shot Senator Kennedy."[12] In addition to Quinn and Vanocur, correspondent Lew Allison also reported from the Ambassador, while Jack Perkins provided live remote reports from Good Samaritan Hospital. In the coming days, NBC provided the most coverage of the three major television networks, 55 hours in all compared to 43 hours by ABC and 42 hours by CBS.[13]

CBS Television had concluded its live anchored coverage of the California primary an hour before Kennedy was shot. Some staffers were at a bar near the network's New York headquarters when they learned of the shooting, and CBS did not begin coverage across the network until approximately 12:38 a.m. PDT.[14] CBS Morning News anchor Joseph Benti headed up the coverage from New York, assisted initially by Mike Wallace. Walter Cronkite, who had gone home after anchoring the network's primary coverage until 11:15 p.m. PDT, eventually joined Benti as co-anchor on the network's California primary set in New York. CBS newsman Roger Mudd, who had been at the Ambassador covering the primary along with fellow correspondent Terry Drinkwater, followed the ambulance to Central Receiving Hospital where Kennedy was first taken, providing an on-air report by telephone and reflecting notable calm despite his personal friendship with Kennedy and Kennedy's wife, Ethel. Mudd then went to Good Samaritan Hospital, to which Kennedy was transferred, to continue his reporting.

Although CBS was off the air at the time of the shooting, it had continued providing a live, un-anchored network feed directly from the Ambassador Hotel so that CBS affiliates, particularly those in California, could air the live pictures if they wished. CBS continued feeding live pictures of the Embassy Room ballroom in the moments after Kennedy had concluded speaking and had left the lectern, although it is believed that only a few CBS affiliates, if any at all, were still airing the feed in those first moments after the Senator's speech. In those initial moments, CBS cameras panned the crowd in that ballroom as well as another crowd of supporters gathered downstairs in the hotel's Ambassador Room ballroom. The Embassy Room crowd was dispersing following Kennedy's victory statement, while the Ambassador Room crowd was milling and chanting, "RFK! RFK! RFK!" in anticipation that the Senator was about to come downstairs to address them as well.

As microphones picked up the sound of supporters in the lower Ambassador Room chanting "Kennedy, Kennedy, rah, rah, rah! Kennedy, Kennedy, shish, boom, bah!", a CBS camera upstairs showed supporters in the Embassy Room reacting to the shooting that had just taken place, off-camera, in the kitchen pantry just off the Embassy Room.

While CBS's audio feed switched from the Ambassador Room to match the pictures of alarm in the Embassy Room, the upper ballroom's northside service doors leading to the pantry could be seen swinging open and the sounds of screaming and chaos could be heard. It was clear that the joyous crowd was now overcome with confusion and, in some cases, panic.

CBS News correspondent Terry Drinkwater, standing at the lectern where Kennedy had just spoken, asked someone what had happened. An unidentified man answered, "Somebody said he's been shot". Drinkwater then advised his CBS colleagues to make sure they were rolling videotape. From the lectern, supporters called out for doctors, and Kennedy's brother-in-law Stephen Smith (with wife Jean Kennedy Smith at his side) calmly asked the crowd to leave the room.

Reporter Andrew West of KRKD, a Mutual Broadcasting System radio affiliate in Los Angeles, captured on audio tape the sounds of the immediate aftermath of the shooting but not the actual shooting itself. Using a reel-to-reel tape recorder and attached microphone, West also provided an on-the-spot account of the struggle with Sirhan Sirhan in the hotel kitchen pantry, shouting at Rafer Johnson to "Get the gun, Rafer, get the gun!" and telling others to "get ahold of [Sirhan's] thumb and break it, if you have to! Get his thumb!" [15].

Earlier, while still on the ballroom stage just after Kennedy's speech, West had briefly asked the Senator how he would overcome Vice President Hubert Humphrey's lead in obtaining delegate commitments to the Democratic National Convention. In a response that seems somewhat garbled in West's recording, Kennedy indicated he knew that a "struggle" still lay ahead of him in his quest for his party's presidential nomination. Following the Senator's response to West's question, the radio reporter switched his tape recorder off. Moments later, as West was following the Kennedy party into the kitchen area, the reporter heard what sounded like balloons popping, followed by a scream and then shouts that Kennedy had been shot. West quickly turned his tape recorder back on, recording the immediate aftermath of the assassination but just missing the actual shots that had just been fired.

In 2004, an audio recording of the RFK shooting, made by freelance newspaper reporter Stanislaw Prusynski, came to light. For more details about it, see Disputes and Contentions below.

Disputes and Contentions

There seems to be no dispute that Sirhan fired his revolver, and Sirhan is alleged to have admitted as much privately.[16] What is disputed is whether any of Sirhan's bullets actually hit Senator Kennedy, whether Sirhan had planned and acted alone or was assisted by another gunman at the scene, and whether Sirhan fired bullets or blanks. As with Robert's brother John's assassination in 1963, the Senator's death has been analyzed by many who have developed various alternative scenarios for the crime, or who argue there are serious problems with the official case.

Autopsy

Forensic experts agree that the autopsy performed on Robert Kennedy was one of the finest autopsies ever performed on a public figure.[citation needed] Rather than resolving all doubt, however, the RFK autopsy raises questions for those who study the assassination. First, there was the location of the wounds on Kennedy's body. Despite the fact that one bullet entered Kennedy's head behind his right ear and two entered at the rear of his right armpit, most witnesses recalled that Sirhan was facing Kennedy when he fired. As is often the case in events such as this, however, eyewitnesses gave differing and contradictory accounts. Many of those present recall that Kennedy stopped and shook hands with people just before the shooting, but some recalled that he then resumed walking. Paul Schrade of the United Auto Workers, who was wounded in the shooting and came to believe that Sirhan had not acted alone, was a few feet behind Kennedy and remembered both Kennedy's shaking hands and his then moving towards the nearby steam table.[17] On the other hand, Valerie Schulte, the blonde best known for her green and yellow polka-dot dress and her crutches, told KABC's Carl George on ABC little more than 30 minutes after the shooting that she was two feet behind Kennedy and to his right as Kennedy moved through the pantry area. She said that Kennedy stopped and turned to his left to shake hands with waiters when an assailant approached from the direction in which Kennedy had been walking. Security guard Thane Eugene Cesar, himself a prime suspect for many conspiracy theorists, told police in a recorded interview shortly after the shooting that Kennedy, walking next to Cesar, had turned to his left to shake hands when the shooting started.[18] KNBC's Piers Anderton reported on NBC about 35 minutes after the shooting that busboy Juan Romero said he was shaking Kennedy's hand when Kennedy was shot.[19] Sirhan is alleged to have told Michael McCowan, an investigator for Sirhan's defense team, that he was unable to shoot Kennedy between the eyes because Kennedy turned his head at the last second,[20] a remarkable confession if true but not entirely consistent with any of the accounts above.

Second, Sirhan's gun was placed by all witnesses at between 2 and 5 feet from the Senator when he fired his revolver. [21] In conducting the autopsy on Kennedy, Los Angeles coroner Dr. Thomas Noguchi found powder burns on Kennedy's ear and gunpowder residue in his hair. Noguchi said this indicated that Kennedy was shot from a distance of, at most, Template:In to cm. (When a firearm is discharged, the powder residue travels only a few inches because the material is very light.) Noguchi's conclusions led to speculation that Sirhan was too far from Kennedy and in the wrong position to have administered the fatal shot (also fired from a .22 caliber handgun, one which had apparently been fired into Kennedy's head at point-blank range from behind his right ear) and that a second shooter must have been present. Dr. Noguchi wrote years later that:

Until more is precisely known…the existence of a second gunman remains a possibility. Thus, I have never said that Sirhan Sirhan killed Robert Kennedy.

— Dr. Noguchi [22][23]

Independent testing (shown in a 2004 "Unsolved History" series program on the Discovery Channel) indicates that gunpowder residue can easily travel over Template:In to cm, but that the stippling effect observed requires that the gun must have been less than Template:In to cm away. In any case, none of the witnesses whose recollections are credited with establishing the distance between Kennedy and Sirhan's gun reported seeing anyone else's gun 1.5 inches from Kennedy's head.[24] Thus, there are three possibilities: (1) the autopsy's estimate of the distance between Kennedy's head and the gun from which the bullets came was inaccurate, (2) the memories of eyewitnesses were inaccurate, or (3) someone other than Sirhan fired a gun 1.5 inches from Kennedy's head without being seen by the approximately 30 people in the room.

Pruszynski recording

Decades after the assassination, it was discovered that the shots in the kitchen pantry had been recorded on audio tape by Stanislaw Pruszynski, a freelance newspaper reporter who was covering Senator Kennedy's presidential campaign for the Montreal Gazette and today resides in his native Poland.[25] Pruszynski had made the recording with a battery-powered portable cassette tape recorder and an attached microphone. Pruszynski's tape is the only known sound recording of the assassination, and analysis of it has only just begun.

At the American Academy of Forensic Sciences annual meeting in Washington, D.C. on February 21, 2008, Philip M. Van Praag of PVP Designs in Tucson, Arizona, presented his conclusions concerning the Pruszynski tape, which he asserted provides a record of a second gun being fired in the assassination.Cite error: A <ref> tag is missing the closing </ref> (see the help page). provided evidence from the recording that convicted gunman Sirhan Sirhan had not acted alone. Pruszynski's audio tape, which had never been broadcast in the 39 years since the murder, was aired for the first time during the Discovery Times program. According to three out of four audio experts interviewed for the documentary, the reporter's recording reveals that a second gun was fired in the Bobby Kennedy shooting.

Stanislaw Pruszynski and his recording equipment were approximately 40 feet southwest of Senator Kennedy when the shots erupted inside the Ambassador Hotel kitchen pantry. Pruszynski was unaware that his portable machine was still operating as it captured the sounds of the Kennedy shooting. Pruszynski also was unaware of the shooting itself because it was taking place amidst the various sounds of celebration, some distance away inside another room and outside the reporter's purview.

At that moment, Pruszynski was about to enter a narrow back corridor leading into the pantry from the hotel’s Embassy Room, a ballroom where Kennedy had just delivered his victory statement following the Tuesday, June 4 California Democratic primary election. When the shooting commenced, Pruszynski was at the north side of the ballroom and descending a small set of steps at the east end of the ballroom's makeshift stage where the Senator had spoken. Although he did not know his recorder was still recording at that point, Pruszynski just happened to be holding his microphone tilted upward and pointed toward the pantry, and above the heads of the crowd on the ballroom floor beneath him. Doors between Pruszynski and the shooting were open at the time.

Film and video shot by more than one camera in the Embassy Room—in particular, an ABC-TV black and white video-relay camera—captured pictures of Pruszynski, his recorder and microphone in hand, as he descended the ballroom platform's east steps, departed the steps and proceeded toward the kitchen pantry precisely while the shooting was taking place off-camera, inside the pantry. As the Kennedy shooting continued in the pantry, Pruszynski continued moving in the ballroom toward the corridor that accessed the pantry, getting his microphone closer to the shooting but still unaware of the shots erupting in that other room.

Pruszynski's audio recording captured a number of rapidly occurring sounds, each one very short in duration and with something of a popping or even clapping quality. "Conspiracy Test" quoted four audio experts who analyzed the Pruszynski recording: Philip Van Praag and Wes Dooley in the United States, Eddie Brixen in Denmark and Philip Harrison in the United Kingdom. Van Praag, Dooley and Brixen determined that the tape had captured at least 10 gunshots—and possibly as many as 13 shots—in the RFK assassination; all other possible sources for the sounds, including popping balloons, ricochets, echoes, etc., were ruled out. The presence of at least 10 shots is highly significant because Sirhan's handgun could fire no more than eight shots at a single time. Sirhan possessed only the one revolver and had no opportunity to reload his weapon once the shooting erupted in the pantry. If the Pruszynski recording does indeed reflect more than eight shots fired, it establishes the existence of a second gunman.

Harrison dissented on the issue of number of shots, reporting that he was able to confirm only seven or eight shots in the Pruszynski recording. The Discovery Times program explained that Harrison had not been provided all of the information and materials that had been made available to the other three experts. While all four experts bypassed a crude cassette copy of the Pruszynski recording that had been created years before by the California State Archives in Sacramento, only the first three experts worked directly from several high-quality digital and analog master dubs of the recording. Harrison relied on a digital copy of just one of those master dubs. Unlike at least two of the other experts, Harrison did not know where Pruszynski and his microphone were located during the Kennedy shooting and was unaware that Pruszynski and his microphone were moving toward the shots as they were being fired. In the Discovery Times TV program, Harrison conceded, "Any information relating to where Mr. Pruszynski was standing at the time or any movements he made during the sequence of shots would, to some degree, have been of assistance."

The Pruszynski recording's importance rests not only upon the number of shots fired but also upon two additional evidence: the intervals between the shots and differing acoustic characteristics.

Two of the four audio experts reported that the Pruszynski recording contains evidence of a second gunman firing virtually simultaneously with Sirhan. They determined—and a firearms expert concurred—that there was at least one set of so-called "double-shots," and possibly two sets. In the one set of "double-shots" that these experts confirmed for "Conspiracy Test", the set's twin shots were fired too close together for both to have come from Sirhan's revolver. The shooting's two separate sets of "double-shots"—that is, the third and fourth shots in the first set and the seventh and eighth shots in the second set—were separated by 122 and 149 milliseconds respectively. In field tests, a trained firearms expert firing under ideal conditions could only manage 366 milliseconds between shots using the same weapon. The dissenting Philip Harrison did not address this key issue of shot intervals.

In addition to the "double-shot" findings, one of the Discovery Times audio experts, Philip Van Praag, reported to the AAFS in 2008 that five of the shots heard in the recording—3, 5, 8, 10 and 12 in a sequence of 13 shots—had odd acoustic characteristics which the expert attributed to their being fired from a second gun pointing away from Pruszynski's microphone. In his scientific paper on the Pruszynski recording, Van Praag reported to the AAFS that a forensic investigation had matched the anomalous acoustic characteristics to those of a Harrington & Richardson .22 firearm known as the H&R Model 922.[26] Sirhan's weapon in the pantry was a .22 caliber Iver-Johnson Cadet.

The significance of the Pruszynski recording was unknown for 36 years until early 2004, when an American journalist obtained a copy of the California State Archives's crude cassette dub of the original recording. The original is the only audio recording known to have captured the actual Robert Kennedy shooting. Two other sound recordings made that night by newsmen Andrew West of Mutual Broadcasting System radio affiliate KRKD and Jeff Brent of the Continental News Service did not capture the shooting itself but recorded only the shooting's immediate aftermath.

Discovery Times's "Conspiracy Test" concluded by posing this question: "Will the continuing respect for Robert Kennedy and the new evidence of a second gunman lead to a re-opening of the RFK assassination?" One of the program's audio experts answered it this way: "My feeling about the evidence that's come up here is that you can't back away from real stuff. It merits closer examination. And as a citizen of this country, [I believe] it has to be looked at."

Suppression or coverup?

James Scott Enyart has claimed he was actively photographing the inside of the Ambassador Hotel kitchen pantry at the moment of the shooting. Furthermore he contends that his three, 36-exposure rolls were confiscated by the LAPD and sealed by court-order for 20 years, and never returned in full which resulted in a lengthy court battle, from 1989 to 1996. The most important piece of photographic evidence, allegedly featuring the scenes of the Senator falling and bullet holes in the door frame and ceiling, were confined in 10 pictures found to be missing from the third negative. The Enyart trial was, from the start, surrounded by a series of blunders, including tampering with evidence in the archives, in addition to the disappearance of a large amount of related court files, and ultimately the missing negative and stolen first-generation prints. [27] Enyart eventually won the trial against the city of Los Angeles and the LAPD and was consequently granted a financial settlement of $450,000. Among Enyart's principal witnesses were Sirhan’s official researchers such as Lynn Mangan and Ted Charach. [28] [29]

Sandra Serrano, a young Kennedy campaign worker, said that during questioning, she was intimidated by police and forced to change her story. The official LAPD transcript of her polygraph interview seems to show that she was pressured to change her statement. [30]

Conspiracy theories

Although no one has found evidence of a link between Sirhan and any co-conspirator, the circumstances of the assassination have given rise to beliefs in some quarters that someone else must have been involved. If someone other than Sirhan fired the bullet that killed Kennedy, who was it?

The security guard

For decades, researchers have identified Thane Eugene Cesar as the most likely candidate for a second gunman in the RFK assassination. Cesar had been employed by Ace Guard Service to protect Robert Kennedy at the Ambassador Hotel. This was not his full-time job. During the day he worked as a maintenance plumber at the Lockheed Aircraft plant in Burbank, a job that required a security clearance from the Department of the Defense. He worked there from 1966 until losing his job in 1971. According to researcher Lisa Pease, Cesar had formerly worked at the Hughes Aircraft Corporation, but author Dan Moldea wrote that Cesar began working at Hughes in 1973, a job he held for seven years and a position Cesar said required the second highest clearance level at the plant.[31]

Cesar was a Cuban American who supported segregationist George Wallace for President. He appeared to have no specific job at Lockheed and apparently had "floating" assignments and often worked in off-limits areas which only special personnel had access to.[citation needed] According to some researchers [weasel words] , these areas were under the control of the CIA.[citation needed]

When interviewed, Cesar admitted that he pulled a gun at the scene of the shooting but insisted the weapon was a Rohm .38, not a .22, the caliber of the bullets found in Kennedy. He also claimed that he got knocked down after the first shot and did not get the opportunity to fire his gun. The LAPD, which interviewed Cesar shortly after the shooting, did not regard Cesar as a suspect and did not ask to see his gun.[32]

Cesar admitted that he did own a .22-caliber H & R pistol, and he showed it to LAPD sergeant P. E. O'Steen on June 24, 1968.[33] When the LAPD interviewed Cesar three years later, however, he claimed that he had sold the gun before the assassination to a man named Jim Yoder. William W. Turner tracked down Yoder in October, 1972. Yoder still had the receipt for the H & R pistol, which was dated September 6, 1968, and bore Cesar's signature. Cesar therefore had sold the pistol to Yoder three months after Kennedy's assassination despite Cesar's claim in 1971 that he had sold the weapon months before the murder.[34] Author Dan Moldea wrote that that Cesar submitted years later to a polygraph examination performed by Edward Gelb, former president and executive director of the American Polygraph Association. Moldea reported that Cesar denied any involvement in Kennedy's assassination and passed the test with flying colors.[35]

The woman in the polka-dot dress

Kennedy campaign worker Sandy Serrano claimed a young Hispanic man and a young Caucasian woman wearing a "polka dot" dress burst from a southwest exit of the Ambassador Hotel's Embassy Room ballroom moments after the shooting, giggling and exclaiming, "We shot him." When she asked them "Who?" the young woman answered, "Senator Kennedy!" The two then walked into a hotel parking lot where an elderly couple named Bernstein saw them, still laughing and saying, "We shot Kennedy."[36] The Bernsteins flagged down LAPD officer Paul Sharaga, who issued an all points bulletin for the young couple but this was canceled without explanation by his superiors. Serrano said she was later coerced by police into changing her story.[36] Researchers have pored over photographs and television pictures from the scene and found women wearing dresses that might be perceived as bearing polka dots, but no likely assassin has been identified.

CIA operatives

On November 20, 2006, the BBC's Newsnight presented research by Shane O'Sullivan alleging that several CIA officers were present on the night of the assassination. On November 20, 2007, O'Sullivan released a video documentary entitled RFK Must Die, providing an update on his investigation and findings.

The CIA had no domestic jurisdiction, and some of the officers were based in Southeast Asia at the time, with no apparent reason to be in Los Angeles. Three of those accused were former senior officers who had worked together in 1963 at JMWAVE, the CIA's main anti-Castro station based in Miami.

JMWAVE Chief of Operations David Morales, Chief of Maritime Operations Gordon Campbell and Chief of Psychological Warfare Operations George Joannides were identified by former acquaintances in photographs taken at the Ambassador Hotel on June 5, 1968. Among those acquaintances was Congressional investigator Ed Lopez, who worked with Joannides while the latter was serving as CIA liaison to the Congressional investigation into the assassination of John F. Kennedy.

According to close associates of Morales, he was known for his deep anger with the Kennedys for what he saw as their betrayal during the Bay of Pigs Invasion. Morales' former attorney Robert Walton quoted Morales as having said, "I was in Dallas when we got the son of a bitch and I was in Los Angeles when we got the little bastard." O'Sullivan reported that the CIA declined to comment on the officers in question.

O’Sullivan interviewed David Rabern, a freelance undercover operative and private investigator who had been in the ballroom of the Ambassador Hotel on the fateful night in 1968. While Rabern did not know Morales and Campbell by name, he had noticed them talking to each other in the hotel lobby prior to the assassination. He also noticed Campbell in and around several police stations in Los Angeles prior to the assassination - a state over which the CIA had no jurisdiction. [37][38][39]

At the end of his documentary, however, Mr. O'Sullivan casts some doubt upon his own presentation up to that point, and reveals that the two men who were previously identified in the documentary as "Campbell" and "Joannides" were in fact two now-deceased Bulova Watch Company employees, at the Ambassador for a company convention. They are further revealed in other footage of the ballroom on the night of the assassination, in various social situations, laughing, talking with others, etc., prior to the shooting of Senator Kennedy. After the shooting, they are shown in television news footage, listening to witnesses, unabashedly wandering before presumably openly visible television cameras, generally looking quite casual and not in any hurry to depart the area. Footage of "Campbell" in particular had been shown several times earlier in the documentary in seemingly suspicious movements, appearing hurriedly to depart the ballroom after the shooting, touching his chest furtively as if concealing a gun, etc.; the later footage in the documentary shows he was still in the ballroom at the time of the shooting and not directly involved.

Moreover, the impressively positive identifications by CIA operatives and acquaintances over time of "Morales" as being a man in the ballroom footage, (and equally at home casually appearing several times in front of obviously placed television cameras after the shooting, including once during an interview of a witness in the kitchen pantry where the shooting took place), were called into question also by O'Sullivan's revelation of new, recently-discovered photographs to add to the 1959 photo used through most of the documentary for viewer comparison to the man in the film footage. The latter photograph indeed greatly resembled the man in the Ambassador ballroom footage; but the new photos, taken between 1966 and 1971, show a man with less resemblance to the man in the Ambassador footage of June 5, 1968.

O'Sullivan himself expresses doubt in the end that the "Morales" in the film footage at the Ambassador and the man positively identified as Morales in the 1966-71 photos are the same man.

O'Sullivan also indicates, without any substantiation, that the Bulova Watch Company was a "well-known cover" for the CIA, according to "several people" to whom O'Sullivan talked off-camera, and attempts by implication to confirm that link by the fact that World War II General Omar Bradley was the chairman of Bulova at the time and also advised President Johnson on Vietnam; nowhere, however, is Bradley linked with the CIA. Bulova did make bomb fuses for the government during the Cold War, but there is no documented historical link with the CIA.

O'Sullivan concludes by asking rhetorically whether the two employees, named by their Bulova employee names in the documentary, based on their being labeled on the back of L.A.P.D. evidence photos demonstrating they had been investigated and interviewed briefly by the police at the time of the assassination, could have been using other names, "Campbell" and "Joannides", in their supposed CIA roles, with the Bulova jobs as cover. The documentary also reveals, however, that the man identified as "Campbell", under his real name, advanced to become a "well-respected" and well-known man in Bulova and the watch industry generally by the late 1970's.

In the end, O'Sullivan's documentary is inconclusive about a CIA presence at the hotel. Whether Sirhan, however, was "handled", brainwashed, manipulated or hypnotized as a "Manchurian candidate", is extensively explored by the documentary, but in the end is loaned no more than speculation by the effort. The analysis, however, is at once intriguing and even plausible.

Robert Kennedy, ironically, had spent the previous night before the shooting at the home of supporter and friend, director John Frankenheimer, director of both "Seven Days in May" and "The Manchurian Candidate".

Sirhan's motivations

Consider the possibility that the man grabbed at the scene firing a gun was responsible for Kennedy's death. What could have motivated a young man to alter history in such a horrible way? A diary police found at Sirhan's home, allegedly penned by Sirhan himself, had stated, "My determination to eliminate RFK is becoming more and more of an unshakable obsession. RFK must die. RFK must be killed. Robert F. Kennedy must be assassinated. .... Robert F. Kennedy must be assassinated before 5 June 1968." According to author Loren Coleman, [40] the date of the assassination is significant, because it was the first anniversary of the first day of the Six Day War between Israel and its Arab neighbors that began on June 5, 1967. Kennedy had voiced support for Israel, and Coleman suggests Sirhan saw himself as a Palestinian militant. Sirhan's shooting of Kennedy, Coleman writes, has been characterized as one of the first acts of Palestine or Arab terrorism to take place on American soil.

Legacy

The assassination of Robert Kennedy is part of a series of events in the 1960s that led to the demoralizing and alienation of many people in the political centre-left in the United States. These events began with the assassination of President John F. Kennedy in 1963 and included the 1968 assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King, culminating in the violence of the 1968 Democratic National Convention in Chicago where police brutally assaulted anti-Vietnam war demonstrators.[41] It is unclear whether Robert Kennedy, had he not been assassinated, would have gone on to become the Democratic presidential nominee. At the time of his death, Kennedy was far behind Vice President Hubert Humphrey in convention delegate support, which Humphrey had gathered through commitments from party bosses outside the presidential primary system.[42] This fact, however, has not deterred many from the belief that Kennedy had indeed wrapped up the nomination by his victory in the California primary.[43] Following Kennedy's June 1968 assassination in Los Angeles, Humphrey continued gathering delegate commitments from the party bosses and was nominated in Chicago. Humphrey went on to lose a very close 1968 presidential election to Republican Richard Nixon.

Bibliography

  • Ayton, Mel. The Forgotten Terrorist: Sirhan Sirhan and the Assassination of Robert F. Kennedy (Potomac Books 2007).
  • Moldea, Dan E. The Killing of Robert F. Kennedy (Norton 1995).
  • Turner, William & Christian, Jonn. The Assassination of Robert F. Kennedy (Carroll & Graf 2006).
  • Witcover, Jules. 85 Days: The Last Campaign of Robert Kennedy (Putnam 1969).

See also

References

  1. ^ Lawrence Teeter, Attorney for Sirhan Sirhan (June 5, 1998). "Sirhan Sirhan and the 30th Anniversary of the Assassination of Senator Robert F. Kennedy" (HTML). jfk-info. Retrieved 2007-08-19. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help); External link in |publisher= (help)
  2. ^ "1964: Election triumph for Lyndon B Johnson". On this Day. BBC. 2005. Retrieved 2008-04-24. {{cite news}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)
  3. ^ "Biography of Lyndon B. Johnson". Retrieved 2008-04-24.
  4. ^ "1968: Martin Luther King shot dead". On this Day. BBC. 2006. Retrieved 2006-09-17. {{cite news}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)
  5. ^ "KENNEDY, Robert Francis - Biographical information". Biographical Directory of the United States Congress.
  6. ^ "A timeline of Sen. Eugene McCarthy's life and political career". Minnesota Public Radio.
  7. ^ Sirhan is reported by some to have exclaimed "Kennedy, you son of a bitch!," Thom White (2005). "RFK Assassination Far From Resolved". CITIZINEmag. Retrieved February 16. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help); External link in |work= (help); Unknown parameter |accessyear= ignored (|access-date= suggested) (help), but most witnesses did not recall hearing him say anything.
  8. ^ Steve Lopez (1998). "Guarding the Dream". TIME. Retrieved August 16. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help); External link in |work= (help); Unknown parameter |accessyear= ignored (|access-date= suggested) (help)
  9. ^ "title" (PICTURE). american history. 2007. Retrieved 2007-08-19. {{cite web}}: External link in |publisher= (help)
  10. ^ Moldea, Dan E., The Killing of Robert F. Kennedy (Norton 1995), p. 85.
  11. ^ "Rosemary Clooney: 1928-2002" (HTML). cincy post. 2002. Retrieved 2008-04-01. {{cite web}}: External link in |publisher= (help)
  12. ^ Moldea, Dan E., The Killing of Robert F. Kennedy (Norton 1995), pp. 70-71
  13. ^ "What Was Going On," Time, June 14, 1968, p. 74.
  14. ^ What Was Going On," Time, June 14, 1968, p. 72.
  15. ^ Andrew West of KRKD (June 5, 1968). "Hear it Now! RFK ASSASSINATED" (AUDIO). Hear it Now!. Retrieved 2007-08-19. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help); External link in |publisher= (help)
  16. ^ While in prison, Sirhan allegedly described to Michael McCowan, an investigator who had been hired by Sirhan's defense team, meeting eyes with Kennedy just before shooting him. Asked by McCowan why he hadn't shot Kennedy between the eyes, Sirhan allegedly replied, "Because [he] turned his head at the last second." Moldea, Dan E., The Killing of Robert F. Kennedy (Norton 1995), p. 326.
  17. ^ Moldea, Dan E., The Killing of Robert F. Kennedy (Norton 1995), pp. 34-35.
  18. ^ Moldea, Dan. E., The Killing of Robert F. Kennedy (Norton 1995), p. 148-49. Cesar could have helped his cause more by putting Sirhan's gun next to Kennedy's head, but even years later he estimated that the gun was two feet from Kennedy's head. Id. at 210.
  19. ^ Anderton was a veteran correspondent who had previously worked for NBC, where he reported The Tunnel, an acclaimed documentary that aired in 1962 about 59 people who escaped from East Berlin to West Berlin. Frank, Reuven, Out of Thin Air: The Brief Wonderful Life of Network News (Simon & Schuster 1991), pp. 192-212. Anderton is the reporter seen and heard in NBC's film (shot by KNBC cameraman Jim Watt) of the chaos in the pantry as Kennedy lay wounded on the floor.
  20. ^ Moldea, Dan E., The Killing of Robert F. Kennedy (Norton 1995), p. 326. Journalist Jules Witcover reported that just before Kennedy was shot, Kennedy turned his head as if looking for someone behind him, such as his wife, but Witcover did not provide the source of this information. Witcover, Jules, 85 Days: The Last Campaign of Robert Kennedy (Putnam 1969), p. 266. Witcover inaccurately wrote that Kennedy was talking to Mutual reporter Andrew West in the pantry when the Senator paused to look behind him just as Sirhan approached. West, by his own admission in more than one interview he gave after the assassination, was not inside the pantry when the shooting occurred. Instead, West was outside the pantry and just down the hall when he heard the shots erupt, which initially sounded to West like balloons popping. In fact, West's famous audio recording of his interview with Kennedy actually had taken place a minute before the shooting while he and the Senator were still on the ballroom stage, immediately following Kennedy's speech.
  21. ^ Shane O'Sullivan Film-maker of Who shot Bobby Kennedy? (post 75 - At 08:12 p.m. on 22 November 2006). "title" (HTML). pub. Retrieved 2007-08-19. We interviewed Frank Burns, for instance. He was standing one foot behind and to the right of Kennedy. He re-enacted the shooting for us in his living room and placed Sirhan three feet away. I would ask Mr Ayton to provide a witness closer to Kennedy who can place Sirhan's gun one inch behind. A dozen witnesses place Sirhan's gun several feet away and in front of Kennedy, not one inch behind. Sirhan's firing trajectory fits the wound patterns of the four other victims and other bullet-holes found in the pantry door-frames. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help); line feed character in |quote= at position 295 (help)
  22. ^ Joseph Geringer (2007). "The Autopsy" (HTML). Crime Library. Retrieved 2007-08-19.
  23. ^ Thomas Noguchi (December 3, 1985). Coroner. Pocket. ISBN 0671624938. {{cite book}}: Check date values in: |year= (help)
  24. ^ Security guard Thane Eugene Cesar did pull a revolver, and Don Schulman, a runner for a local television station, even said he saw Cesar fire the gun at Sirhan, Moldea, Dan E., The Killing of Robert F. Kennedy (Norton 1995), pp. 146-47, but no one reported seeing another gun so close to Kennedy's head. If there was a second, unseen, gunman, he apparently was in Sirhan's line of fire and eluded the people who surrounded Sirhan and grabbed his arm while he was still firing.
  25. ^ "Destination Guides: Warsaw". The Travel Channel.
  26. ^ James Randerson (2008-02-22). "New evidence challenges official picture of Kennedy shooting". The Guardian. Retrieved 2008-02-23. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  27. ^ EMI ENDO and ERIC MALNIC TIMES STAFF WRITERS (Thursday, January 18, 1996). "New Twist in Kennedy Mystery" (HTML). Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2007-08-19. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  28. ^ Rose Lynn Mangan (2007). "Sirhan's Researcher" (HTML). www.sirhansresearcher.com. Retrieved 2007-08-19. Photos of the RFK assassination. Jamie Scott Enyart, who was behind and to the left of RFK during the shooting, took a series of photos of the event. His film was immediately confiscated by L.A.P.D. officers and was sealed for 20 years. When the seal was lifted in 1988, Enyart applied for the return of his film and was only given prints of photos from the same roll that were taken before he entered the pantry. The ten photos that he took in the pantry during the assassination were reported to be lost. I testified at Enyart's trial on his behalf (see p. 36 of Special Exhibit 10 Report), and I clearly demonstrated the flat out falsification of evidence by the L.A.P.D. The jury later awarded him a settlement of $450,000. A letter of from Scott's attorneys expressing thanks for my help is on p.35 of the Special Exhibit 10 Report. For more details, I refer you to pp.245-246 of William Turner's book, "Rearview Mirror," published by Penmarin Books, 2001, ISBN #1883955211. The chapter referenced in this book also contains a conclusion by former forensics acoustics expert Dr. Michael H. L. Hecker of the Stanford Research Institute in Menlo Park, CA, that his analysis of three audio tapes from the night of the shooting (i.e., the Andrew West, Jeff Brent and ABC TV recordings) indicate that "no fewer than ten gunshots are ascertainable following the conclusion of the Senator's victory speech until after the time that Sirhan was disarmed." Sirhan's gun was only capable of firing eight rounds. {{cite web}}: External link in |publisher= (help)
  29. ^ "An Open & Shut Case" (HTML). www.anopenandshutcase.com. 2008. Retrieved 2008-02-28. Michael Hecker's conclusion that the West, Brent and Smith/ABC TV recordings captured shots was wrong. Both Dr. Joling and Dr. Hecker now acknowledge this error and Dr. Hecker has rescinded his statement of November 13, 1982. This means that only the Pruszynski recording is known to have captured the shots and, according to Van Praag's and Joling's findings, the Pruszynski recording captured 13 shots. See Pages 255-256 of Joling's and Van Praag's book, Epilogue Part I: Errors, Omissions and Sundry Happenings. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help); External link in |publisher= (help)
  30. ^ Joseph Geringer (2007). "Robert Kennedy Assassination: Revisions and Rewrites". Crime Library. Retrieved 2007-12-06. Because Serrano was the most adamant about the existence of the phantom lady, she was turned over to a Sgt. Enrique Hernandez for in-depth questioning on the topic. The interview lasted more than an hour and, badly shaken from the almost-accusatory nature of the interview, she took and failed a polygraph (lie detector) test.
  31. ^ Moldea, Dan E., The Killing of Robert F. Kennedy (Norton 1995), pp. 200-01.
  32. ^ Moldea, Dan E., The Killing of Robert F. Kennedy (Norton 1995), p. 149.
  33. ^ Moldea, Dan. E., The Killing of Robert F. Kennedy (Norton 1995), pp. 151-52.
  34. ^ Moldea, Dan. E., The Killing of Robert F. Kennedy (Norton 1995), pp. 151-52.
  35. ^ Moldea, Dan E., The Killing of Robert F. Kennedy (Norton 1995), pp. 280-290.
  36. ^ a b crimelibrary.com, Robert F. Kennedy assassination, retrieved 27 February 2008
  37. ^ "CIA role claim in Kennedy killing". Newsnight. BBC News. 2006-11-21. Retrieved 2006-11-21. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  38. ^ O'Sullivan, Shane (2006-11-20). "Did the CIA kill Bobby Kennedy?". The Guardian. Retrieved 2006-11-21. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  39. ^ It's Time to Re-Open the Investigation of RFK and JFK Assassinations
  40. '^ The Copycat Effect New York: Paraview Pocket-Simon and Schuster, 2004, ISBN 0-7434-8223-9
  41. ^ Brief History of Chicago's 1968 Democratic Convention from Allhistory, CNN and Time.]
  42. ^ Kerridge, Steven (2007-01-27). "Would Robert Kennedy have been president?". The Guardian. Retrieved 2007-11-26. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  43. ^ Thomas, Evan. Robert Kennedy: His Life. (New York: Simon & Schuster, 2000), p. 24

External links

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