As the president stepped out of the VIP elevator after the speech, Parr and the other agents surrounded him in a human barricade. Uniformed police stood guard on the sidewalk. Beyond them was the rope line where onlookers and members of the press eagerly awaited an opportunity to shout out a question or greeting. The president smiled and waved.
What happened next would shock the world.
Click here to see a video of the Reagan Assassination attempt.
John Hinckley, Jr. fired six shots in 1.7 seconds. The first bullet hit White House Press Secretary James Brady. The second hit District of Columbia Police Officer Thomas Delahanty. The third bullet went into a window of a building across the street. The fourth bullet hit agent Tim McCarthy as he spread out his body in an attempt to protect the president. The fifth hit the bullet-proof window of the presidential limousine.
The sixth and final bullet struck the armored side of the limousine, ricocheted through the gap between the car door and its frame, and struck the president under his left armpit. It sliced through his left lung, bounced off a rib, and lodged an inch from his heart. Three seconds from the time the first shot was fired, the limousine was speeding away with Parr and the president in the back seat. But nobody — not even the president himself — realized he had been shot.
Readers of IN THE SECRET SERVICE will understand why Jerry Parr said the Reagan assassination attempt was both the worst — and the best — day of his life.
Jerry Parr is best known as the 50-year-old Secret Service agent who saved President Reagan’s life, but his actions that day are only part of his remarkable story.
What’s the story behind the 1939 film Code of the Secret Service?
Jerry Parr was 9 years old in 1939 when his father took him to see the film Code of the Secret Service starring Ronald Reagan as the dashing agent Brass Bancroft. From that day on, Parr dreamed of joining the Secret Service, and did so in 1962. Not long after the 1981 assassination attempt, Parr asked the president, “Did you know you were an agent of your own destiny?” He told Reagan how the movie had inspired him. The president laughed and said, “That was one of the cheapest films I ever made.”
Attempted assassination of Ronald Reagan – Wikipedia
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