Sirhan Sirhan, Man Who Assassinated Robert F. Kennedy, Granted Parole

0
Sirhan Sirhan, Man Who Assassinated Robert F. Kennedy, Granted Parole
Sirhan Sirhan, convicted murderer of Robert F. Kennedy.

Man convicted of killing Robert F. Kennedy was granted parole on Friday after two of the former attorney general, senator and presidential hopeful’s sons spoke in favor of release and prosecutors declined to argue he should be kept behind bars.

Sirhan Sirhan, now 77, has been behind bars for five decades — despite doubts that he fired the shots that likely changed the course of US politics.

Robert or Bobby, the younger brother of slain president John F. Kennedy, was campaigning for the Democratic nomination when he was gunned down in a Los Angeles hotel.

Bobby Kennedy addresses campaign workers moments before being shot in Los Angeles in 1968. Photograph: Dick Strobel/AP

His murder came just months after the killing of Black civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr, and as a divided America was deep in an unpopular war in Vietnam.

Sirhan was convicted and sentenced to death in 1969 after pleading guilty. His death sentence was commuted to life imprisonment several years later.

However, doubts soon surfaced that he was actually responsible for Robert’s death, with claims that there could have been a second gunman in the Ambassador Hotel on June 5, 1968.

Robert after being shot.

Kennedy had given a speech at the hotel after winning California’s Democratic presidential primary.

On a walkabout in the kitchen where he met staff, he was shot, as were several other people in his entourage, among them Paul Schrade, who took a bullet to the head.

Schrade, along with Robert’s then-14-year-old son, have since campaigned for Sirhan’s release, saying the evidence against him does not stack up.

He told AFP on Friday that;

It is a good decision. I’m really grateful to the parole board for giving Sirhan the chance to go home.

The vote on Friday by a two-person panel of the California parole board does not mean that Sirhan will automatically be released.

(FILES) This October 29, 2009 handout image obtained from California Department of Corrections shows Sirhan Sirhan, convicted for the 1968 assassination of Democratic presidential candidate Senator Robert F. Kennedy. (Photo by – / California Department of Corrections / AFP)

The decision is subject to a three-month review, and then ultimately passes to state Governor Gavin Newsom, a Democrat who faces a recall vote in September.

During Friday’s hearing, Robert’s youngest son, Douglas, spoke in favor of Sirhan’s release, media reports said, adding that Robert F. Kennedy Jr had sent a letter of support to the parole board.

Robert F. Kennedy Jr told The Washington Post in 2018 that he had visited Sirhan in the California desert prison where he was serving his sentence, and had become convinced that an injustice had been perpetrated.

He told the paper;

I went there because I was curious and disturbed by what I had seen in the evidence. I was disturbed that the wrong person might have been convicted of killing my father.

My father was the chief law enforcement officer in this country. I think it would have disturbed him if somebody was put in jail for a crime they didn’t commit.

Uncertainty over Sirhan’s guilt began during his trial, when prosecutors produced an autopsy report that showed Robert was shot at point-blank range from behind. Witnesses said Sirhan was standing in front of him.

Over the years and in numerous appeals, evidence emerged that as many as 13 shots were fired that night.

The weapon Sirhan was found to have fired could hold only eight bullets.

Sirhan, a Palestinian Christian, was said at his trial to have hated Robert because of his support for Israel.

After RFK’s death, Hubert Humphrey captured the Democratic nomination. But his closeness to Lyndon Johnson and the unpopular Vietnam War saw the general election go to Richard Nixon.

The ongoing controversy has echoes of the 1963 killing of John F. Kennedy, in which some historians insist more than one gunman was involved.

The Kennedy dynasty is often described as the closest thing the United States has to royalty.

Their wealth and political power has captivated generations of Americans — as have the scandals in which they have become embroiled.

John F. Kennedy was alleged to have had connections to the mob, and was reported to have had affairs with screen sirens, Marilyn Monroe and Marlene Dietrich.

Most infamously, Senator Ted Kennedy — Bobby and John’s brother — was behind the wheel in 1969 when his car crashed into a pond, trapping 28-year-old Mary Jo Kopechne inside. He fled the scene and Kopechne died.

The so-called ‘Chappaquiddick Incident’ left a stain on the family legacy.

Leave A Reply

Your email address will not be published.