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Four US presidents were assassinated, others targeted: All you need to know
Before Saturday’s apparent attempted assassination of former President Donald Trump, there have been multiple instances of political violence targeting US presidents, former presidents and major party presidential candidates.
ABRAHAM LINCOLN, the 16th president
Lincoln was the first president to be assassinated, shot by John Wilkes Booth on April 14, 1865, as he and his wife, Mary Todd Lincoln, attended a special performance of the comedy Our American Cousin at Ford’s Theatre in Washington.
Lincoln was taken to a house across the street from the theater for medical treatment after he was shot in the back of the head. He died the next morning. His support for Black rights has been cited as a motive behind his killing.
Two years before the assassination, during the Civil War, which was fought over slavery, Lincoln issued the Emancipation Proclamation granting freedom to slaves within the Confederacy.
Lincoln was succeeded by Vice President Andrew Johnson.
Booth was shot and killed on April 26, 1865, after he was found hiding in a barn near Bowling Green, Virginia.
Garfield was the second president to be assassinated, six months after taking office. He was walking through a train station in Washington on July 2, 1881, to catch a train to New England when he was shot by Charles Guiteau.
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Garfield was succeeded by Vice President Chester Arthur.
Guiteau was found guilty and executed in June 1882.
McKinley was shot after giving a speech in Buffalo, New York, on Sept. 6, 1901. He was shaking hands with people passing through a receiving line when a man fired two shots into his chest at point-blank range. Doctors had expected McKinley to recover but gangrene then set in around the bullet wounds.
McKinley died on Sept. 14, 1901, six months after opening his second term.
He was succeeded by Vice President Theodore Roosevelt.
Leon F. Czolgosz, an unemployed, 28-year-old Detroit resident, admitted to the shooting. Czolgosz was found guilty at trial and put to death in the electric chair on Oct. 29, 1901.
Roosevelt, at the time the president-elect, had just given a speech in Miami from the back of an open car when gunshots rang out.
Roosevelt was not injured in the February 1933 shooting that killed Chicago Mayor Anton Cermak.
Guiseppe Zangara was convicted in the shooting and sentenced to death.
Truman was staying at Blair House, across the street from the White House, in November 1950 when two gunmen broke in.
Truman was not injured, but a White House policeman and one of the assailants were killed in an exchange of gunfire. Two other White House policemen were wounded.
Kennedy was fatally shot by a hidden assassin armed with a high-powered rifle as he visited Dallas in November 1963 with first lady Jacqueline Kennedy. Shots rang out as the president’s motorcade rolled through Dealey Plaza in downtown Dallas.
Kennedy was rushed to Parkland Memorial Hospital, where he died soon after.
He was succeeded by Vice President Lyndon B. Johnson, who was sworn into office in a conference room aboard Air Force One. He is the only president to take the oath of office on an airplane.
Hours after the assassination, police arrested Lee Harvey Oswald after finding a sniper’s perch in a nearby building, the Texas School Book Depository.
Two days later, Oswald was being taken from police headquarters to the county jail when Dallas nightclub owner Jack Ruby rushed forward and fatally shot Oswald.
Ford faced two assassination attempts within weeks in 1975 and was not hurt in either incident.
In the first attempt, Ford was on his way to a meeting with California’s governor in Sacramento when Charles Manson disciple Lynette Squeaky Fromme pushed through a crowd on the street, drew a semi-automatic pistol and pointed it at Ford. The gun wasn’t fired.
Fromme was sentenced to prison and released in 2009.
It was 17 days later when another woman, Sara Jane Moore, confronted Ford outside a hotel in San Francisco. Moore fired one shot and missed. A bystander grabbed her arm as a second shot was attempted.
Moore was sent to prison and released in 2007.
Reagan was leaving a speech in Washington, D.C., and walking to his motorcade when he was shot by John Hinckley Jr., who was in the crowd.
Reagan recovered from the March 1981 shooting. Three other people were shot, including his press secretary, James Brady, who was partially paralyzed as a result.
Hinckley was arrested and confined to a mental hospital after a jury found him not guilty by reason of insanity in shooting Reagan. In 2022, Hinckley was freed from court oversight after a judge determined he was no longer a danger to himself or others.
Bush was attending a rally in Tbilisi in 2005 with Georgian President Mikhail Saakashvili when a hand grenade was thrown toward him.
Both men were behind a bulletproof barrier when the grenade, wrapped in cloth, landed about 100 feet away. The grenade did not explode, and no one was hurt.
Vladimir Arutyunian was convicted and sentenced to life in prison.
The former president was shot in Milwaukee in 1912 while campaigning to return to the White House.
Roosevelt had previously served two terms as president and was running again as a third-party candidate.
Folded papers and a metal glasses case in Roosevelt’s pocket apparently blunted the bullet’s impact and he was not seriously hurt.
John Schrank was arrested and spent the remainder of his life in mental hospitals.
Kennedy was seeking the Democratic presidential nomination when he was killed at a Los Angeles hotel moments after giving his victory speech for winning the 1968 California primary.
Kennedy was a U.S. senator from New York and the brother of President John F. Kennedy, who was assassinated five years earlier.
Five other people were wounded in the shooting.
Sirhan Sirhan was convicted of first-degree murder and sentenced to death. That was commuted to life in prison, where Sirhan remains after his latest petition for release was denied last year.
Wallace was seeking the Democratic presidential nomination when he was shot during a campaign stop in Maryland in 1972, an incident that left him paralyzed from the waist down.
Wallace, the governor of Alabama, was known for his segregationist views, which he later renounced.
Arthur Bremer was convicted in the shooting and sentenced to prison. He was released in 2007.
(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)