• 1975...Democrat shoots at Pres. Ford...

    From Gun Control@21:1/5 to All on Mon Apr 16 02:52:06 2018
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    006-12-27 04:00:00 PDT Washington -- But for some quick action,
    Gerald R. Ford's presidency, and his life, could have ended amid
    gunshots outside San Francisco's St. Francis Hotel on the
    afternoon of Sept. 22, 1975.

    As Ford emerged from the historic Union Square hotel's Post
    Street entrance at 3:30 p.m. after addressing a World Affairs
    Council audience, he paused before getting into his limousine to
    wave to the crowd across the street.

    In a flash, two shots rang out. The first narrowly missed the
    38th president of the United States and the second was deflected
    by a bystander who grabbed at the arm of the shooter, a 45-year-
    old middle class housewife, dabbler in extremist politics and
    FBI informant named Sara Jane Moore.

    A young San Francisco police patrol officer then subdued Moore
    before she could fire her .38 Smith & Wesson handgun again.

    Secret Service agents pushed Ford into his limousine and in
    seconds had the presidential motorcade racing south toward San
    Francisco International Airport to get the president out of the
    city and back to the safety of Washington, D.C.

    The Secret Service had good reason to believe it best to hustle
    Ford out of the state. After all, Moore's failed shooting was
    the second attempt on Ford's life in California within about two
    weeks. On Sept. 5, 1975, Charles Manson groupie Lynette
    "Squeaky" Fromme had tried to fire at Ford on the state Capitol
    grounds in Sacramento as he walked from the Senator Hotel across
    L Street to a meeting with then-Gov. Jerry Brown.

    Fromme never got a shot off, even though her gun was loaded with
    four rounds, before a Secret Service agent wrestled her to the
    ground.

    "Ford was puzzled by these shooting attempts," recalled Ron
    Nessen, who was then the presidential press secretary and who
    witnessed both incidents. "But it was the '70s in San Francisco
    and California, and there was lots of anti-Vietnam War activity
    and lots of anti-government activity."

    The big Bay Area news of the time was the kidnapping of
    newspaper heiress Patricia Hearst by the radical Symbionese
    Liberation Army.

    Nessen remembers both attacks like they were yesterday. "The
    president decided to walk through the Capitol park to meet Gov.
    Brown. He was on a path, and we were parallel to him on the
    grass. Suddenly, there was a flurry of activity. The Secret
    Service rushed the president into the Capitol, and we ran into
    the Capitol, too.

    "He went ahead with his meeting with Brown," Nessen recalled.

    Fromme, armed with a .45 Colt automatic, was tackled before she
    could remember to rack a round into the handgun's firing chamber.

    Within three months, Fromme was convicted of trying to kill Ford
    and sentenced to life in prison. She is now in a federal prison
    in Fort Worth, Texas, and still pledges allegiance to Manson,
    the mastermind behind Los Angeles' notorious Tate-LaBianca
    murders of 1969.

    For San Francisco police Capt. Timothy Hettrich, the first law
    enforcement officer to reach Moore, the attempted shooting
    outside the St. Francis prompted an instant reaction.

    "I grabbed the gun immediately," he said, "just two or three
    seconds after she fired it."

    Moore's gun hand initially had been deflected by another person
    in the crowd, Marine Vietnam veteran Oliver "Bill" Sipple, who
    had come to see Ford.

    "It was a big crowd," remembered Hettrich, then a patrol officer
    who is now a captain commanding the San Francisco police
    narcotics unit. "We were stationed 10 feet apart.

    "You get the adrenalin going. I grabbed her, wrestled the gun
    from her hands. It was pointed at me, and other people were
    jumping on her."

    Hettrich and others took Moore into the St. Francis, and he
    turned the gun over to the Secret Service.

    Nessen recalls that as the shots rang out, he looked for a car
    in the waiting motorcade that already had its doors open. He
    jumped into a car with Donald Rumsfeld, who was then Ford's
    White House chief of staff.

    After racing from downtown, the Ford motorcade drove onto the
    tarmac at the airport, and the presidential party hurried aboard
    Air Force One. Before it could leave, however, the plane had to
    wait for first lady Betty Ford, who had been carrying out her
    own schedule of events on the Peninsula.

    Nessen, who now lives in suburban Maryland, said the first lady
    had no idea that her husband had been attacked. "She said
    something like, 'How are you, dear? How did your day go?' "

    "I think it was Rumsfeld who finally told her that someone took
    a shot at the president. ... We took off and what had happened
    sunk in. I can tell you that quite a few martinis were consumed
    on the flight back," Nessen added.

    Moore decided to plead guilty, avoiding a trial. After a
    sentencing hearing at which Hettrich was a main witness, she was
    sentenced to life in prison, just like Fromme. Moore, now 75, is
    at the Federal Correctional Institution in Dublin.

    For Sipple, his moment of heroism was also his undoing. On Sept.
    24, 1975, The Chronicle ran a story saying that one reason the
    White House had yet to thank Sipple for his potentially
    lifesaving gesture was that he was a gay man.

    It turned out that Sipple's family had not known he was gay, and
    the disclosure resulted in him being alienated from his
    relatives. Sipple sued The Chronicle for damages, but his case
    was eventually dismissed.

    He slid into alcoholism and died in 1989 in his Van Ness Avenue
    apartment at age 47. Among his prized possessions was the letter
    of thanks he eventually got from the White House.

    Moore and Fromme share another distinction. They both escaped
    briefly from the women's federal prison in Alderson, W.Va.

    Peninsula author Geri Spieler, who has written a yet-to-be-
    published biography of Moore, has known her since 1976 and
    doubts Moore will ever be freed from prison.

    She said that Moore, who was married five times and who is the
    mother of four, is still dangerous.

    "She has personality disorders. She has no sense of the
    consequences of her actions.

    "She's not totally a violent person, unless you don't do what
    she wants you to do. ... She's narcissistic and self-righteous,
    and she will flip the minute you don't do what she wants,"
    Spieler said.

    In her long interviews with Spieler, Moore never expressed any
    remorse for shooting at Ford.

    "She calls herself a political prisoner. This is Sara Jane's
    version of the truth. She never looks back at the pain and
    suffering she has caused so many people," Spieler added.

    As for Ford himself, the former president was dismissive of both
    of his would-be assassins.

    "Squeaky Fromme certainly was off her mind. Sara Jane Moore, the
    same way," he told CNN interviewer Larry King in 2004.

    "People said to me, 'Why don't you stay in the White House and
    not go out to meet the public?' My answer to them was, a
    president has to be aggressive, has to meet the people, and
    therefore, I did," Ford added.

    The White House never announced it, Nessen said, but after the
    St. Francis incident, Ford always wore a thin bulletproof vest
    in public.

    https://www.sfgate.com/news/article/Ford-escaped-2-assassination- attempts-Both-2481771.php
     

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