Just two seconds

Home > Other > Just two seconds > Page 51

Location: Mundy Township, Michigan

  Details: A tractor-trailer slammed into freeway traffic that was stopped for Clinton's motorcade, causing a fiery, chain-reaction collision. Two women and an infant were killed.

  1375. Date: November 26, 1995

  Target: Parliament Member Sergei Markidonov

  Location: Chita, Russia

  Details: Markidonov was shot in the head and killed by his bodyguard in their hotel room. The two had been drinking heavily. The bodyguard then shot himself, but survived. Markidonov was the fourth Russian lawmaker killed in one way or another in less than two years.

  1376. Date: June 17, 1997

  Target: First Prime Minister Norodom Ranariddh

  Location: Phnom Penh, Cambodia

  Details: A feud between Ranariddh and Second Prime Minister Hun Sen reportedly erupted into a two-hour gun battle between their bodyguards. At least two of Ranariddh's men were killed. One rocket landed in the courtyard of the U.S. Ambassador's residence. Both sides claimed the other was attempting an assassination. Secretary of State Madeleine Albright canceled a two-day trip there due to security concerns.

  1377. Date: July 25, 1997

  Target: Secretary of State Madeleine Albright

  Location: Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia

  Details: One of Albright's security agents reportedly shot himself in the foot while checking his gun in his hotel room. Albright was attending a conference of Southeast Asian nations. The agent was treated at a local hospital and released the next day.

  1378. Date: September 29, 1997

  Target: U.S. Ambassador Edward Walker

  Location: Hurghada, Egypt

  Details: Three bodyguards for Walker reportedly left a suitcase with handguns at a restaurant. The embassy sent a driver to collect the weapons.

  1379. Date: January 1, 1998

  Target: Party Chairman Sheikh Shamseddine

  Location: Beirut, Lebanon

  Details: Shamseddine was praying at a mosque when his bodyguard said he spotted suspicious activity in the surrounding woods. According to the bodyguard's story, someone opened fire, wounding him, and he retaliated. Police found 30 casings from the bodyguard's gun, but no other evidence. Police concluded that the bodyguard had imagined the whole incident and that his wound probably came from one of his own bullets that ricocheted.

  1380. Date: May 4, 1998

  Target: Pope John Paul II

  Location: Vatican City, Italy

  Details: A member of the elite Swiss Guards shot and killed his commander, his commander's wife, and then himself. The killings occurred a few hundred yards from the Pope's apartment. The killings recalled a similar incident in 1959, when a Guard member shot and wounded his commander, and tried to kill himself. (The Swiss Guards have protected popes since 1506.)

  1381. Date: August 26, 1999

  Target: Prime Minister Ehud Barak

  Location: Galilee, Israel

  Details: A resident of a Galilee village where Barak was on holiday drew gunfire from bodyguards after refusing on principle to stop his car at a security roadblock. Bullets blew out the tires of his car in which his two young daughters also were traveling. The driver said he was fed up with the tight security in place for Barak's three-day vacation. Barak's office in Jerusalem issued a statement expressing regret over the incident and relief that it ended without injuries.

  1382. Date: November 22, 1999

  Target: Qahtan al-Ahmar (son of Parliament Speaker)

  Location: Sanaa, Yemen

  Details: Yemeni security forces shot and wounded a bodyguard escorting the son of a top official. The clash broke out at an airport after al-Ahmar refused to hand over his weapons and those of his bodyguards before entering the terminal. Al-Ahmar was arrested after the one-hour gun battle, in which the airport's tower was hit by at least one bullet.

  1383. Date: December 27, 1999

  Target: Singer Sean "Puffy" Combs

  Location: Manhattan, New York

  Details: Combs and his entourage, including actress/singer Jennifer Lopez, began to argue with patrons in a nightclub. Combs and another man reportedly pulled out guns and Barrow began firing, shooting three people. They fled the scene and were chased by police for several blocks before being caught. Police found a stolen 9mm handgun in the car. They arrested Combs and the other man, as well as Combs' driver. A bodyguard was arrested for possession of a weapon and marijuana. Combs was later acquitted.

  1384. Date: June 12, 2001

  Target: Queen Elizabeth II

  Location: London, England

  Details: An inquiry was launched after a police guard accidentally fired his Glock 9mm pistol inside Buckingham Palace. He was inside a designated loading area of the palace, and no one was injured. Previously, a guard traveling with the queen on her train accidentally fired two shots just yards from where the monarch and her husband were sleeping. No one was injured.

  1385. Date: July 26, 2001

  Target: Prince William

  Location: London, England

  Details: Scuffling with a photographer, a bodyguard's Glock 9mm pistol accidentally fell onto the pavement in front of William. The weapon did not fire and other bodyguards hustled William away.

  1386. March 18, 2004

  Target: Governor Jose Murat

  Location: Oaxaca City, Mexico

  Details: It was originally reported that six to eight assailants attacked Murat while driving in his car. Subsequent investigation revealed three bullet holes in the windshield of Murat's car came from shots fired by his chief bodyguard from inside the car. It also appeared the shell casings outside the car also came from the chief bodyguard's weapon. Investigators later announced Murat had staged the "attack," and his bodyguards were arrested for lying to investigators.

  1387. Date: July 8, 2004

  Target: President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva

  Location: Belo Horizonte, Brazil

  Details: An elderly man died after being run over by a police motorcycle accompanying Silva's three-car motorcade.

  1388. Date: November 30, 2004

  Target: President Boris Tadic

  Location: Belgrade, Serbia

  Details: Tadic's motorcade was traveling through traffic when a car repeatedly tried to hit his motorcade. First reported as an assassination attempt in the media, the incident was later found to be an off-duty security guard from the U.S. Embassy, who became irritated at the manner in which Tadic's cars were driving. The guard did not realize it was the motorcade for the President.

  1389. Date: February 11, 2006

  Target: Vice President Dick Cheney

  Location: Corpus Christi, Texas

  Details: Cheney accidentally shot and wounded a companion during a quail-hunting trip, spraying the fellow hunter in the face and chest with shotgun pellets. Emergency personnel traveling with Cheney tended to the injured man until the ambulance arrived and transported him to the hospital.

  1390. Date: September 18, 2006

  Target: Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeh

  Location: Gaza City, Gaza Strip

  Details: Haniyeh was approaching the Parliament Building when his path was blocked by protesters. His bodyguards then opened fire to disperse the crowd. At least one woman was reportedly hurt in the melee.

  "I ran over to the Associated Press wire, with a red light flashing, meaning urgent story coming, and there was the flash: PRESIDENT SHOT ... And it all came back to me. All the police chiefs and Secret Service warnings that always seemed so stupid; all the worry and the jokes about assassinations; all the preparations I'd always laughed at."

  Jerry Bruno and Jeff Greenfield, The Advance Man, on the assassination of JFK

  Section 4

  Attacks Against U.S. Presidents

  At the time of President Abraham Lincoln's death, he kept an envelope entitled "Assassinations," which contained 80 death threats. Presidents today receive that many threats nearly every week.

  There are 15 officially-counted attack
s on U.S. Presidents, with weapons including pistols, a rifle, an assault rifle, a bomb, and even an airplane. Only one attack involved multiple gunmen, and they were the only people in the official 15 that could be called terrorists. All of the other attackers acted alone, although Booth's shooting of Abraham Lincoln was part of a conspiracy and he was arguably a terrorist.

  We said only 15 incidents are officially counted as attacks on U.S. Presidents, however there have been many more attempts on the lives of U.S. Presidents, some foiled or deterred at the scene (a woman realizes she can't get into an event without her handgun being detected, for example), and some never reported publicly. Also, the criteria for what is or is not called an attack is not always consistent. For example, an attempt by Samuel Byck to hijack an airliner and force it to crash into the White House is counted as a attack even though Byck didn't get the jet off the ground -- while an attack in which a stolen plane was actually crashed into the White House was not counted as an attack.

  For the purposes of comparison to the insights gained from the cases in the Compendium, we're provided a brief review of all the officially-counted attacks on all U.S. Presidents. (Those attacks that occurred after 1960 are also included in earlier sections.)

  1391. Date: January 30, 1835

  Target: President Andrew Jackson

  Location: Washington, D.C.

  Details: Jackson was attending a state funeral at the Capitol Building. Richard Lawrence, an out-of-work house painter, read in the newspaper that Jackson would attend and staked out the East Portico. When Jackson emerged, Lawrence stepped from behind a pillar 13 feet away and drew two single-shot pistols. The cap of one fired, but the bullet didn't fire. Jackson heard the noise, and charged Lawrence with his cane raised. Lawrence fired the second pistol, but it also misfired. He was apprehended, prosecuted, and committed to a mental hospital where he later died.

  1392. Date: April 14, 1865

  Target: President Abraham Lincoln

  Location: Washington, D.C.

  Details: Lincoln was watching the play Our American Cousin at Ford's Theater, seated with his wife Mary, Major Henry Rathbone, and Clara Harris in Box 7. Officer John Parker, who was assigned as his bodyguard, became bored and went next door to a saloon to get a drink, leaving Lincoln unprotected. John Wilkes Booth, one of nine conspirators, stepped into the box behind Lincoln and shot him in the back of the head with a .44 caliber Derringer. He then stabbed Rathbone, jumped onto the stage, and escaped. Lincoln was carried across the street to the Peterson House, where he died nine hours later. Booth was shot and killed by soldiers on April 26, while hiding in a barn near Bowling Green, Virginia.

  1393. Date: July 2, 1881

  Target: President James Garfield

  Location: Washington, D.C.

  Details: Charles Guiteau waited for Garfield to arrive at the train station after reading in the newspaper that he would leave that day. Garfield arrived unguarded, accompanied by Secretary of State James Blaine. As Garfield walked through the waiting room, Guiteau approached them from the rear and fired a .44 British Bulldog revolver, striking Garfield in the back. The bullet fractured his eleventh and twelfth ribs, the first lumbar vertebra, severed a large artery, and stopped behind the pancreas. He then stepped closer and fired again, but only pierced Garfield's coat sleeve. Guiteau was apprehended by a nearby policeman, tried, and hung. Garfield was rushed back to the White House, but died two months later from complications.

  1394. Date: September 6, 1901

  Target: President William McKinley

  Location: Buffalo, New York

  Details: Leon Czolgosz read in the Buffalo newspaper that McKinley would be shaking hands in a receiving line at the Pan American Exposition Hall. The hall was heavily guarded with soldiers, Expo police, four Secret Service agents and four Buffalo police detectives. Czolgosz approached with a .32 Iver Johnson revolver concealed with a handkerchief wrapped around his hand. When McKinley moved to shake his hand, Czolgosz pushed it aside and shot him twice, once in the breastbone and once in the abdomen. The first bullet didn't penetrate; the second came to rest in the muscles of his back. At the time of the shots, one Secret Service agent had his hand on Czolgosz's back, pushing him through the line. Czolgosz was overpowered, tried, and electrocuted. McKinley died eight days after the attack.

  1395. Date: October 14, 1912

  Target: Former President Theodore Roosevelt

  Location: Milwaukee, Wisconsin

  Details: John Schrank followed Roosevelt for 2,000 miles through eight states in 24 days of campaigning, waiting for an opportunity to kill him. Roosevelt walked out of his hotel, got into his open car, and turned to wave at the crowd. Schrank fired his .38 Colt revolver from six feet away. Roosevelt was struck in the right chest, suffering only a broken fourth rib and a minor wound. A metal case for carrying reading glasses and a folded 50-page speech slowed the bullet substantially, such that Roosevelt was able to complete his speech. He told the audience, "It takes more than one bullet to stop a bull moose!" After the speech, he was taken to the hospital for treatment. He carried the bullet in his chest until he died seven years later, of natural causes. Schrank was tried and spent the rest of his life in prison.

  1396. Date: February 15, 1933

  Target: President-elect Franklin D. Roosevelt

  Location: Miami, Florida

  Details: Giuseppe Zangara read in the newspaper that Roosevelt would visit Bayfront Park. He was waiting among a crowd of 10,000 people in the bleachers when Roosevelt's motorcade pulled up and stopped. Roosevelt made a short speech from his open car, and then Chicago Mayor Anton Cermak came down from the stage to visit with Roosevelt. Zangara fired five shots from a .32 revolver at a distance of 25 feet. Five people were hit: Three bystanders collapsed with head wounds, a woman was struck in the stomach, and Cermak was hit in the right side, striking his lung. Though Roosevelt was not injured, Cermak died from his wounds three weeks after the attack.

  1397. Date: November 1, 1950

  Target: President Harry Truman

  Location: Washington, D.C.

  Details: Truman was staying at Blair House while the White House was being restored. Oscar Collazo and Griselio Torresola were intent on bringing attention to the issue of Puerto Rican independence. Collazo approached the Blair House from the east armed with a Walther P-38 pistol, and Torresola approached from the west armed with a Luger pistol. They attempted to rush the front door and had agreed to shoot anyone who got in their way. In the ensuing gun battle, one White House policeman was killed, as was Torresola. Collazo was wounded and captured. Twenty-seven shots were fired in less than three minutes. Collazo was sentenced to death, but Truman later commuted it to life in prison. He was later freed when President Carter commuted that sentence. (4-STARS: Protector action during the attack entirely prevented injury.)

  1398. Date: December 11, 1960

  Target: President-elect John F. Kennedy

  Location: Palm Beach, Florida

  Details: Kennedy was staying at his father's home in Florida, following his election victory. He emerged from the house to go to mass, accompanied by his wife, daughter, and several nieces and nephews. Across the street, Richard Pavlick sat in his car and watched Kennedy prepare to leave. On the seat next to Pavlick were many sticks of dynamite wired to a knife switch. He planned to ram Kennedy's car and throw the switch, killing Kennedy and himself in the process. Seeing the children with the President-elect, he decided to kill Kennedy another day and left. Pavlick had visited the compound to observe security prior to this aborted attempt. Later, he visited a church the Presidentelect frequented, to learn about its interior. Police were tipped off to Pavlick by a postmaster who had received alarming letters from him. Four days after the aborted attempt at Kennedy's home, Pavlick was arrested without incident. They found with him the sticks of dynamite, and a letter, written in the past tense, explaining why he had killed Kennedy.

  1399. Date: November 22, 1963

  Target: Preside
nt John F. Kennedy

  Location: Dallas, Texas

  Details: Kennedy was riding in an open car through the streets of Dallas to attend political meetings. Three rounds from a Mannlicher-Carcano 6.5mm rifle were fired at Kennedy's car as it passed the Texas School Book Depository, where Oswald worked. According to the Warren Commission investigation, the first round missed, the second round struck Kennedy in the back, passed through him, then struck Texas Governor John Connally in the back, passed through his chest, through his wrist, coming to rest in his thigh, and the third round struck Kennedy in the head, causing a massive, fatal wound. Kennedy died on the scene but was rushed to Parkland Hospital, where he was declared dead. Oswald reportedly fled the Book Depository and later allegedly murdered a policeman before being arrested. The shots fired from the Texas School Book Depository covered a distance of 263 feet, the farthest distance from which anyone has harmed a U.S. President. Controversy has continued for four decades about the number of shots fired, the origin of shots, and the number of assailants.

  1400. Date: February 22, 1974

  Target: President Richard Nixon

  Location: Baltimore, Maryland

  Details: Samuel Byck shot his way onto a Delta jet at the Baltimore-Washington Airport. He intended to hijack the plane, force the pilots to take off, and then crash the plane into the White House to kill Nixon. He killed a security guard and the crew, before police shot and wounded him. He then killed himself. He was armed with a .22 revolver and a gasoline bomb in a briefcase.

  1401. Date: September 5, 1975

  Target: President Gerald Ford

  Location: Sacramento, California

  Details: Ford was walking through a park from his hotel to the state capitol building, during an official visit. Lynette "Squeaky" Fromme stood among a large group of well-wishers along the route. As Ford neared her, she pulled a Colt .45 pistol out and aimed it at Ford. Secret Service Agent Larry Buendorf grabbed the gun and disarmed her, while other agents surrounded the president and rushed him into the capitol building. (4-STARS: Protector action during the attack entirely prevented injury.)

 

‹ Prev