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Revision as of 02:23, 21 March 2005 view sourceJimWae (talk | contribs)Extended confirmed users, Pending changes reviewers, Rollbackers37,709 edits reorganize, add some detail← Previous edit Revision as of 02:35, 21 March 2005 view source JimWae (talk | contribs)Extended confirmed users, Pending changes reviewers, Rollbackers37,709 edits Sirhan is not known to mention MKULTRA, it is outside speculationNext edit →
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There seems to be no dispute that Sirhan did fire; what is disputed is whether there was another gunman, behind Kennedy, at the scene who fired. Like his brother ]'s ] ], RFK's death has been analyzed by many ], who have developed various alternative scenarios for the crime. There seems to be no dispute that Sirhan did fire; what is disputed is whether there was another gunman, behind Kennedy, at the scene who fired. Like his brother ]'s ] ], RFK's death has been analyzed by many ], who have developed various alternative scenarios for the crime.


Many of the witnesses to the shooting said that Sirhan was at least three feet away from Kennedy. Los Angeles ] ], however, found powder burns on Kennedy's ear and gunpowder residue in his hair. Noguchi said this meant the gun was just inches from Kennedy's head when he was shot. (When a firearm is discharged, the powder travels only a few inches because the gas is very light.) <!-- This has led some to heated controversy over the length of Sirhan's arms and the direction of air currents in the hallway. (Are Sirhan's arms only 2 feet long? (2 feet sounds like a normal length for a man's arm.) Maybe 2 foot 5 - and 4 inches more for the gun?)--> It was later revealed a photographer had taken many pictures at the exact moment of the shooting, but these were confiscated by the LAPD and never found. It was also later revealed a young Kennedy supporter named ] said a couple burst out of the hotel the night of the shooting exclaiming, "We shot Kennedy." <!-- "Shout it out, who killed the Kennedys . . . well, after all, it was you and me."--> Though some say Sirhan was about one-and-a-half feet from Kennedy, many of the witnesses to the shooting said that Sirhan was at least three feet away from Kennedy. Los Angeles ] ], however, found powder burns on Kennedy's ear and gunpowder residue in his hair. Noguchi said this meant the gun was just inches from Kennedy's head when he was shot. (When a firearm is discharged, the powder travels only a few inches because the gas is very light.) <!-- This has led some to heated controversy over the length of Sirhan's arms and the direction of air currents in the hallway. (Are Sirhan's arms only 2 feet long? (2 feet sounds like a normal length for a man's arm.) Maybe 2 foot 5 - and 4 inches more for the gun?)--> It was later revealed a photographer had taken many pictures at the exact moment of the shooting, but these were confiscated by the LAPD and never found. It was also later revealed a young Kennedy supporter named ] said a couple burst out of the hotel the night of the shooting exclaiming, "We shot Kennedy." <!-- "Shout it out, who killed the Kennedys . . . well, after all, it was you and me."-->


Sirhan later claimed he acted unconsciously, possibly as the result of "hypnotic ]" which he attributed to the ]'s ] program. <!-- Did HE mention that program by name? --> Sirhan later claimed he acted unconsciously, and that he has no memory of the event. This has led to speculations that he was acting under the influence of "hypnotic ]" which many attribute to the ]'s ] program (similar to the plot of '']'').


== External links == == External links ==

Revision as of 02:35, 21 March 2005

File:Robertkennedy.jpg
Robert Kennedy

U.S. Senator Robert F. Kennedy was assassinated in Los Angeles on June 5, 1968. At the time he was killed, Kennedy had just won the June 4 Democratic Presidential primaries in South Dakota and California, making him the front-runner for the Democratic nomination for President during the 1968 presidential election. He died the next day, on June 6.

The convicted assassin, 24-year-old Palestinian Sirhan B. Sirhan, attributed the killing to Kennedy's support for Israel during the Six-Day War. On March 3, 1969, in a Los Angeles, California court, Sirhan admitted that he had killed Kennedy.

Five other people were wounded, and FBI testimony is that 8 shots were fired and 8 bullets recovered.

Kennedy addressed his supporters on the evening of June 5 in a ballroom at the Ambassador Hotel in Los Angeles. As he and his entourage walked through the kitchen hallway, Sirhan shot into the crowd. Olympic gold medalist decathlete Rafer Johnson and football player Roosevelt Grier helped detain Sirhan, with Grier jamming his thumb behind the trigger of the gun to prevent further shots from being fired.

There seems to be no dispute that Sirhan did fire; what is disputed is whether there was another gunman, behind Kennedy, at the scene who fired. Like his brother John's 1963 assassination, RFK's death has been analyzed by many conspiracy theorists, who have developed various alternative scenarios for the crime.

Though some say Sirhan was about one-and-a-half feet from Kennedy, many of the witnesses to the shooting said that Sirhan was at least three feet away from Kennedy. Los Angeles coroner Thomas Noguchi, however, found powder burns on Kennedy's ear and gunpowder residue in his hair. Noguchi said this meant the gun was just inches from Kennedy's head when he was shot. (When a firearm is discharged, the powder travels only a few inches because the gas is very light.) It was later revealed a photographer had taken many pictures at the exact moment of the shooting, but these were confiscated by the LAPD and never found. It was also later revealed a young Kennedy supporter named Sandy Serrano said a couple burst out of the hotel the night of the shooting exclaiming, "We shot Kennedy."

Sirhan later claimed he acted unconsciously, and that he has no memory of the event. This has led to speculations that he was acting under the influence of "hypnotic brainwashing" which many attribute to the CIA's MK-Ultra program (similar to the plot of The Manchurian Candidate).

External links