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<text id=93TT1849>
<title>
June 07, 1993: And Now, Who Shot R.F.K.?
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
Jun. 07, 1993 The Incredible Shrinking President
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
HISTORY, Page 45
And Now, Who Shot R.F.K.?
</hdr>
<body>
<p>A new radio documentary raises the old question of whether America
is hooked on conspiracy theories
</p>
<p>By JOHN ELSON--With reporting by Georgia Harbison/New York and Jeffrey Ressner/Los
Angeles
</p>
<p> The images are still vivid 25 years later. The young Palestinian
Sirhan Sirhan, gun blazing, moving toward Robert F. Kennedy
in Los Angeles' Ambassador Hotel on June 5, 1968. The Senator
lying in a pool of blood on the floor of the crowded hotel pantry.
His ex-officio bodyguards, Olympic hero Rafer Johnson and former
football star Roosevelt Grier, grabbing Sirhan. Shock--and
then grief for another American hero senselessly dead before
his time.
</p>
<p> At the time there seemed little doubt that Sirhan, who detested
Kennedy's pro-Israel stance, was guilty as sin. He was there;
he fired at Bobby. But over the years, investigators, including
police and FBI agents, have challenged the official version
of events. This week more than 160 stations of the National
Public Radio network will air a 60-minute documentary, The
RFK Tapes, which contends that the case against Sirhan is, or
ought to be, far from closed. Producer-narrator William Klaber
proposes that Sirhan was a brainwashed setup for the real killer.
(One oft-cited suspect, who denies involvement: a part-time
security guard named Thane Eugene Cesar.) And who had programmed
Sirhan? In the tapes' most notable contribution to shadow history,
Klaber points to Dr. William Bryan Jr., a California sex therapist
(now dead) who had purportedly conducted hypnosis experiments
for--yes, you guessed it--the CIA.
</p>
<p> Klaber, a free-lance journalist who designs and builds houses
in upstate New York, claims that his program is "the audio equivalent
of the Rodney King video." Skeptical listeners may reasonably
consider Sirhan's brainwashing by a sex doc rather less plausible
than the jury's conclusion that the defendant acted alone. Still,
the tapes make a strong case that both the murder investigation
by the Los Angeles police department and the subsequent trial
were badly botched and left too many questions unanswered.
</p>
<p> Take the coroner's autopsy. Dr. Thomas Noguchi testified that
Kennedy had been killed by a bullet fired no more than three
inches from the back of his head. Sirhan, according to many
witnesses, was at least three feet in front of the Senator when
he shot all eight bullets from his .22-cal. pistol. What's more,
FBI investigators found evidence--from tiles and door jambs
destroyed by the L.A.P.D. shortly after the trial--that 12
or 13 bullets had been fired in the pantry. According to a weapons
expert for the L.A.P.D., DeWayne Wolfer, the bullets that killed
R.F.K. were unquestionably fired from Sirhan's gun. However,
some experts believe that Wolfer did his forensic testing not
with Sirhan's gun but with a different .22 cal. weapon--which
police also destroyed.
</p>
<p> Then there was the matter of "the girl in the polka-dot dress."
Several people remembered seeing her with Sirhan and another
man at the hotel before the shooting. The RFK Tapes speculates
that she was Sirhan's "baby-sitter," or control. The L.A.P.D.,
while purportedly trying to find the woman, tried harder to
browbeat witnesses into changing their stories.
</p>
<p> None of this potentially exonerating detail was fully explored
in court. In what proved to be an astounding strategic misjudgment,
Sirhan's chief attorney, Grant Cooper, did not challenge the
prosecution's "facts." The defense relied entirely on a theory
of impaired judgment, which the jury had no trouble rejecting.
Sirhan's death sentence was subsequently reduced to life imprisonment,
which he is serving at California State Prison in Corcoran.
</p>
<p> Has America a fixation on assassination conspiracies? After
all, the latest furor over who really killed J.F.K., inspired
by Oliver Stone's movie, has only recently abated. There remain
rabid challenges to official versions of the Martin Luther
King and Malcolm X murders. To sociologist Amitai Et zioni,
the fascination with these questions reflects a need to explain
life's inexplicable dark side: Why did all these heroes die?
That tendency is encouraged by America's individualism, which
encourages an instinctive distrust of authority and officialdom.
</p>
<p> Mark Blitz of the Hudson Institute, an Indianapolis-based think-tank,
argues that the persistence of conspiracy theories reflects
a collective sense of impotency--people feeling powerless
before blind forces they cannot control. In its most benign
form, this near paranoia confines itself to Elvis spotting.
At worst it leads to convictions that the Jews--or reactionary
capitalists, or unreconstructed communists--secretly control
the world.
</p>
<p> To Klaber, suspicions about the Sirhan verdict are based on
fact, not fancy, and others who have followed the case and its
aftermath concur. Retired L.A.P.D. sergeant Paul Schraga, the
first cop on the scene after the shooting, is convinced that
right-wing zealots in his department's elite intelligence unit
were involved in the assassination. "Conspiracy?" he says. "You
bet your bottom dollar there was a conspiracy." Several celebrities,
including Norman Mailer and historian Arthur Schlesinger Jr.,
have petitioned a Los Angeles County grand jury to review the
L.A.P.D.'s investigation of the younger Kennedy's killing. Alas,
considering how much evidence has disappeared, it is an open
question whether such a probe would resolve old doubts--or
create new ones.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>