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From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Monday, January 15, 2001 5:01 PM
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Subject: [ttp-hou] Who Shot Ron? PART ONE


Who Shot Ron? PART ONE
First I must say that I DO NOT KNOW who shot President Ronald Reagan.
There are an awful lot of THEORIES out there. Here are SOME of them.
http://www.tarpley.net/bush17.htm
"Bizarre happenstance, a weird coincidence"
· Bush spokeswoman Shirley M. Green, March 31, 1981 "For Bush, the
vice presidency was not an end in itself, but merely another stage in
the ascent towards the pinnacle of the federal bureaucracy, the White
House. With the help of his Brown Brothers, Harriman/Skull and Bones
network, Bush had now reached the point where but a single human life
stood between him and the presidency.- White House press secretary
James Brady could say in early March, 1981:
"Bush is functioning much like a co-president. George is involved in
all the national security stuff because of his special background as
CIA director. All the budget working groups he was there, the economic
working groups, the Cabinet meetings. He is included in almost all the
meetings." -"Partly in an effort to bring harmony to the Reagan high
command, it has been decided that Vice President George Bush will be
placed in charge of a new structure for national security crisis
management, according to senior presidential assistants. This
assignment will amount to an unprecedented role for a vice president
in modern times. In the Carter administration, the crisis management
structure was chaired by Zbigniew Brzezinski, the national security
adviser -Bush's stature, by virtue of job title and experience, was
cited as the reason that he was chosen to chair meetings in the
Situation Room in time of crisis. Principal officials involved in
crisis management will be the secretaries of state and defense, the
Central Intelligence Agency director, the national security adviser,
Meese, and Baker, officials said, adding that the structure has not
been fully devised nor the presidential directive written."-"White
House press secretary James Brady read the following statement to the
press:
I am confirming today the President's decision to have the Vice
President chair the Administration's "crisis management" team, as a
part of the National Security Council system....President Reagan's
choice of the Vice President was guided in large measure by the fact
that management of crises has traditionally-and appropriately-been
done in the White House. - "article in the Washington Post of Sunday,
March 22 was also a harbinger of things soon to come. This piece was
entitled "Anatomy of a Washington Rumor," and the rumor it traced was
that "Vice President George Bush had been nicked by a bullet in a
predawn shooting outside a townhouse somewhere on Capitol Hill."
According to this story, the source of the rumor in question was a
young woman artist living on Capitol Hill who had rushed into the
street on the evening of February 22 when she heard the sound of a
traffic accident near her home. There she was met a by a police
officer whom she had met previously, on the occasion of the murder a
few weeks earlier of a young Supreme Court Librarian in the same spot.
According to the woman artist, the policeman told her: "The vice
president was shot today." When the woman artist tried to check on
this story with the news media, the article alleged, the rumor took on
a life of its own and became an inchoate news story, with Jack
Anderson and others trying to verify it. Vice President Bush was
reportedly very angry when he was told about the rumor: "Peter Teeley,
the vice president's press secretary, told Bush of the inquiries. The
vice president was incredulous and was as angry as Teeley had ever
seen him. 'Jesus, this is the craziest thing I have ever heard,' he
said. Bush though the whole thing was silly. 'You should call
Barbara,' he told Teeley, ' and let her know what this is all about."
Why would Bush be so angry about a spurious report? As reporters dug
deeper into the alleged shooting, one asked a Secret Service contact
if there had been any recent shooting incidents monitored by his
agency. "The answer came back. On March 8, as a motorcade drove west
on Canal Road, officers had heard a 'popping sound' from a 'steep,
rocky cliff' on the Virginia side of the Potomac River. But it had
been President Reagan's motorcade, not Bush's. And the noises never
proved to be gunfire." Had there been an attempt to assassinate
Reagan, or to intimidate him? In any case Senator Howard Baker, the
GOP majority leader at that time, was overheard making jokes about the
allegedly discredited Rumor at a weekend party, and this was duly
noted in the Washington Post of March 25. In the midst of the
Bush-Baker cabal's relentless drive to seize control over the Reagan
administration, John Warnock Hinckley Jr.  carried out his attempt to
assassinate President Reagan on the afternoon of March 30, 1981.
George Bush was visiting Texas that day.  Bush was flying from Fort
Worth to Austin in his Air Force Two Boeing 707. In Fort Worth, Bush
had unveiled a plaque at the Hyatt Regency Hotel, the old Hotel Texas,
designating it as a national historic site. This was the hotel,
coincidentally, in which John F. Kennedy had spent the last night of
his life, before going on to Dallas the next day, November 22, 1963.
Here was a sinister symbolism!   In Austin Bush was scheduled to
deliver an address to a joint session of the Texas state legislature.
It was Al Haig who called Bush in the clear and told him that the
President had been shot, while forwarding the details of Reagan's
condition, insofar as they were known, by scrambler as a classified
message. Haig was in touch with James Baker III, who was close to
Reagan at George Washington University hospital. Bush's man in the
White House situation room was Admiral Dan Murphy, who was standing
right next to Haig. Bush agreed with Haig's estimate that he ought to
return to Washington at once. But first his plane needed to be
refueled, so it landed at Carswell Air Force Base near Austin.
Refueling took about forty minutes; during this time Bush talked on
board the plane with Texas Governor William Clements, his wife, Rita,
and Texas Secretary of State George Strake. Texas Congressman Jim
Wright was also travelling on Bush's plane that day, as were
Congressmen Bill Archer of Houston and Jim Collins of Dallas. Bush's
top aide Chase Untermeyer was also with the party on Air Force Two.
[Bush says that his flight from Carswell to Andrews Air Force Base
near Washington took about two and one half hours, and that he arrived
at Andrews at abouit 6:40 PM.
Bush
says he was told by Ed Meese that the operation to remove the bullet
that
had struck Reagan was a success, and that the president was likely to
survive. Bush's customary procedure was to land at Andrews and then
take a helicopter to the vice presidential residence, the Naval
Observatory on Massachusetts Avenue. His aides Ed Pollard and John
Matheny suggested that he would save time by going by helicopter
directly to the White House south
lawn, where he could arrive in time to be shown on the 7 PM Eastern
time evening news broadcasts. Bush makes much of the fact that he
refused to do this, allegedly on the symbolic grounds that "Only the
President lands on the south lawn."  Back at the White House, the
principal cabinet officers had assembled in the situation room and
had
been running a crisis
management committee during the afternoon. Haig says he was at first
adamant that a conspiracy, if discovered, should be ruthlessly
exposed: "It was essential that we get the facts and publish them
quickly. Rumor must not be allowed to breed on this tragedy.
Remembering the aftermath of the Kennedy assassination, I said to
Woody Goldberg, 'No matter what the truth is about this shooting, the
American people must know it." [ But the truth has never been
established.  Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger's memoir of that
afternoon reminds us of two highly relevant facts. The first is that a
"NORAD [North American Air Defense Command] exercise with a simulated
incoming missile attack had been planned for the next day." Weinberger
agreed with General David Jones, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of
Staff, that this exercise should be cancelled. Weinberger also recalls
that the group in the Situation Room was informed by James Baker that
"there had been a FEMA [Federal Emergency Management Administration]
exercise scheduled for the next day on presidential succession, with
the general title 'Nine Lives.' By an immediate consensus, it was
agreed that exercise should also be cancelled." As Weinberger further
recalls, "at almost exactly 7:00, the Vice President came to the
Situation Room and very calmly assumed the chair at the head of the
table."  According to Weinberger, the first item discussed was the
need for someone to sign the Dairy Price Support Bill the next day so
as to reassure the public. Bush asked Weinberger for a report on the
status of US forces, which Weinberger furnished. Another eyewitness of
these transactions was Don Regan, whom the Tower Board later made the
fall-guy for Bush's Iran-contra escapades. Regan records that "the
Vice President arrived with Ed Meese, who had met him when he landed
to fill him in on the details.  George asked for a condition report:
1) on the President; 2) on the other wounded; 3) on the assailant; 4)
on the international scene.  After the reports were given and it was
determined that there were no international complications and no
domestic conspiracy, it was decided that the US government would carry
on business as usual. The Vice President would go on TV from the White
House to reassure the nation and to demonstrate that he was in
charge." As Weinberger recounts the same moments: "[Attorney General
Bill French Smith] then reported that all FBI reports concurred with
the information I had received; that the shooting was a completely
isolated incident and that the assassin, John Hinckley, with a
previous record in Nashville, seemed to be a 'Bremmer' type, a
reference to the attempted assassin of George Wallace." Those who were
not watching carefully here may have missed the fact that just a few
minutes after George Bush had walked into the room, he had presided
over the sweeping under the rug of the decisive question regarding
Hinckley and his actions: was Hinckley a part of a conspiracy,
domestic or international? Not more than five hours after the attempt
to kill Reagan, on the basis of the most fragmentary early reports,
before Hinckley had been properly questioned, and before a full
investigation had been carried out, a group of cabinet officers
chaired by George Bush had ruled out a priori any conspiracy. Haig,
whose memoirs talk most about the possibility of a conspiracy, does
not seem to have objected to this incredible decision.  From that
moment on, "no conspiracy" became the official doctrine of the US
regime, for the moment a Bush regime, and the most massive efforts
were undertaken to stifle any suggestion to the contrary. The iron
curtain came down on the truth about Hinckley.  What was the truth of
the matter? The Roman common sense of Lucius Annaeus Seneca (who had
seen so many of Nero's intrigues, and who would eventually fall victim
to one of them) would have dictated that the person who would have
profited most from Reagan's death be scrutinized as the prime suspect.
That was obviously Bush, since Bush would have assumed the presidency
if Reagan had succumbed to his wounds. The same idea was summed up by
an eighth grade student at the lice Deal Junior High School in
Washington DC who told teachers on March 31: "It is a plot by Vice
President Bush to get into power. If Bush becomes President, the CIA
would be in charge of the country." The pupils at this school had been
asked for their views of the Hinckley assassination attempt of the
previous day. Curiously enough, press accounts emerging over the next
few days provided a compelling prima facie case that there had been a
conspiracy around the Hinckley attentat, and that the conspiracy had
included members of Bush's immediate family. Most of the overt facts
were not disputed, but were actually confirmed by Bush and his son
Neil.
On Tuesday, March 31 the Houston Post published a copyrighted story
under the headline: "BUSH'S SON WAS TO DINE WITH SUSPECT'S BROTHER, by
Arthur Wiese and Margarte Downing." The lead paragraph read as
follows: Scott Hinckley, the brother of John Hinckley Jr., who is
charged with shooting President Reagan and three others, was to have
been a  dinner guest Tuesday night at the home of Neil Bush, son of
Vice President George Bush, The Houston Post has learned. According to
the article, Neil Bush had admitted on Monday, March 30 that he was
personally acquainted with Scott Hinckley, having met with him on one
occasion in the recent past. Neil Bush also stated that he knew the
Hinckley family, and referred to large monetary contributions made by
the Hinckleys to the Bush 1980 presidential campaign. Neil Bush and
Scott Hinckley both lived in Denver at this time. Scott Hinckley was
the vice president of Vanderbilt Energy Corporation, and Neil Bush was
employed as a land man for Standard Oil of Indiana. John W. Hinckley
Jr., the would-be assassin, lived on and off with his parents in
Evergreen, Colorado, not far from Denver.  Neil Bush was reached for
comment on Monday, March 30, and was asked if, in addition to Scott
Hinckley, he also knew John W. Hinckley Jr., the would-be killer. "I
have no idea," said Neil Bush. "I don't recognize any pictures of him.
I just wish I could see a better picture of him." Sharon Bush, Neil's
wife, was also asked about her acquaintance with the Hinckley family.
"I don't even know the brother," she replied, suggesting that Scott
Hinckley was coming to dinner as the date of a woman whom Sharon did
know. "From what I know and have heard, they [the Hinckleys] are a
very nice family...and have given a lot of money to the Bush campaign.
I understand he [John W. Hinckley Jr.] was just the renegade brother
in the family. They must feel awful."  It also proved necessary for
Bush's office to deny that the vice-president was familiar with the
"Hinckley-Bush connection." Bush's press secretary, the British-born
Peter Teeley, said when asked to comment: "I don't know a damn thing
about it. I was talking to someone earlier tonight, and I couldn't
even remember his [Hinckley's] name. All I know is what you're telling
me." Teeley denied that Bush had revealed that he knew Hinckley or the
Hinckley family when he first heard the assassin's name; the vice
president "made no mention of it whatsoever." Bush, repeated Teeley,
"certainly didn't indicate anything like that." Chase Untermeyer of
Bush's staff, who had been with him throughout the day, put in that in
his recollection Bush had not been told the assailant's name through
the time that Bush reached the Naval Observatory in Washington on his
way to the White House. On April 1, 1981, the Rocky Mountain News of
Denver carried an account of a press conference given the previous day
in Denver by Neil Bush. During most of the day on March 31, Neil Bush
had refused to answer phone calls from the media, referring them to
the vice presidential press office in Washington.  But then he
appeared in front of the Amoco Building at East 17th Avenue and
Broadway in Denver, saying that he was willing to meet the media once,
but then wanted to "leave it at that." As it turned out, his wishes
were to be scrupulously respected, at least until the Silverado
Savings and Loan scandal got out of hand some years later. The Rocky
Mountain News article signed by Charles Roos carried Neil Bush's
confirmation that if the assassination had not happened, Scott
Hinckley would have been present at a dinner party at Neil Bush's home
that very same night. According to Neil, Scott Hinckley had come to
the home of Neil and Sharon Bush on January 23, 1981 to be present
along with about 30 other guests at a surprise birthday party for
Neil, who had turned 26 one day earlier.
Scott Hinckley had come "through a close friend who brought him,"
according to this version, and this same close female friend was
scheduled to come to dinner along with Scott Hinckley on that last
night of March, 1981. "My wife set up a surprise party for me, and it
truly was a surprise, and it was an honor for me at that time to meet
Scott Hinckley," said Neil Bush to reporters. "He is a good and decent
man.  I have no regrets whatsoever in saying Scott Hinckley can be
considered a friend of mine. To have had one meeting doesn't make the
best of friends, but I have no regrets in saying I do know him." Neil
Bush told the reporters that he had never met John W. Hinckley, Jr.,
the gunman, nor his father, John W. Hinckley, president and chairman
of the board of Vanderbilt Energy Corporation of Denver. But Neil Bush
also added that he would be interested in meeting the elder Hinckley:
"I would like [to meet him]. I'm trying to learn the oil business, and
he's in the oil business. I probably could learn something from Mr.
Hinckley.  Neil Bush then announced that he wanted to "set straight"
certain inaccuracies that had appeared the previous day in the Houston
Post about the relations between the Bush and Hinckley families. The
first was his own wife Sharon's reference to the large contributions
from the Hinckleys to the Bush campaign. Neil asserted that the 1980
Bush campaign records showed no money whatever coming in from any of
the Hinckleys.-. The other issue the Houston Post had raised regarded
the 1978 period, when George W. Bush of Midland, Texas, Neil's oldest
brother, had run for Congress in Texas' 19th Congressional district.
At that time Neil Bush had worked for George W. Bush as his campaign
manager, and in this connection Neil had lived in Lubbock, Texas
during most of the year. This raised the question of whether Neil
might have been in touch with gunman John W.
Hinckley during that year of 1978, since gunman Hinckley had lived in
Lubbock from 1974 through 1980, when he was an intermittent student
at
Texas Tech University there. Neil Bush ruled out any contact between
the Bush family and gunman John W. Hinckley in Lubbock during that
time". END OF PART ONE



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