On September 5, 1975, Lynette "Squeaky" Fromme, a member of the Manson Family cult, attempted to assassinate United States President Gerald Ford in Sacramento, California. Fromme, who was standing a little more than an arm's length from Ford, pointed a M1911 pistol at him in the public grounds of the California State Capitol building and without chambering a round in the gun, unsuccessfully attempted to fire.
After the assassination attempt, Ford continued to walk to
the California State House, where he
met with Governor Jerry Brown. For
her crime, Fromme spent 34 years in prison and was released on August 14,
2009—two years and seven months after Ford's death. The Gerald R. Ford Presidential Museum in Grand Rapids, Michigan, later
received the M1911 pistol used in
the assassination attempt as a gift, and the gun was put on display.
History
Lynette Fromme,
who was nicknamed "Squeaky" by
George Spahn, was a follower of
cultist Charles Manson, leader of
the group convicted of murdering actress Sharon
Tate and eight others in Los Angeles, California, in 1969. Fromme was one
of the earliest followers of Manson and had a reputation as being one of the
most devoted. Through the years, Fromme assumed a leadership role in keeping
Manson cult members in communication with each other after most of them had
been imprisoned.
In April 1971, Fromme served 90 days in jail for attempting
to feed a hamburger laced with the psychedelic drug LSD to Barbara Hoyt, a witness to the Tate
murder, to keep Hoyt from testifying in the murder trial. Fromme lived at
1725 P Street in Sacramento (38°34′16″N 121°29′09″W) in an attic apartment with Sandra Good, a close friend who also
was a long-time member of the Manson Family. Four years later in 1975, Fromme
wanted to confront President Ford on the environmental pollution his campaign
brought forth and its effects on ATWA
(air, trees, water, animals).
Events leading
towards the assassination attempt
In July 1975, California's relatively new governor, Democrat Jerry Brown, refused to commit
to speak at the 49th annual Sacramento "Host Breakfast," an
annual gathering of wealthy California business leaders to be held in the Sacramento Convention Center on the morning
of September 5, 1975. To teach Brown a political lesson, for what he would
describe more than 30 years later as a "dilatory
response" to the invitation, the politically powerful group invited U.S. President Ford, a Republican, to
make the September 5, 1975, morning speech instead. Ford saw California's
electoral votes as critical to his success in the 1976 United States
presidential election and accepted the invitation to speak at the Host
Breakfast.
In early August 1975, The
New York Times reported that the United
States Environmental Protection Agency had released a study entitled "A Spectroscopic Study of California
Smog," showing that smog was widespread in rural areas. The New York Times article also noted
how President Ford had just asked the United
States Congress to relax provisions of the 1963 Clean Air Act beyond the 1970
Clean Air Act amendments and provided details on Ford's upcoming September
trip to California. After learning of Ford's upcoming visit, ex-convict Thomas Elbert was arrested on August 18
in response to Elbert phoning the United
States Secret Service and threatening to kill Ford when he visited
Sacramento.
At about the same time, Fromme came to believe that
California's giant coastal redwoods, the tallest trees in the world, were in
danger of falling because of automobile smog reaching their rural location. Feeling
personally responsible for the fate of the redwoods, Fromme traveled to San
Francisco to meet with a San Francisco government official to save the trees
from pollution. After returning from San Francisco, Fromme watched a news
report from her P Street apartment and learned some details of Ford's plans to
visit Sacramento. The hotel Ford would be staying at, the Senator Hotel, was located a little more than one-half mile (0.80
km)—about fifteen minutes walking distance—from Fromme's Sacramento apartment.
At this point, Fromme decided to bring attention to the trees by putting fear
into the government by killing its symbol, President Ford. Fromme said
that her decision was rooted in her desire "to
get a life. Not just my life but clean air, healthy water,” and respect for
creatures and creation.
Weapon
The M1911 pistol,
produced 64 years earlier in 1911 by Colt Firearms, was manufactured the same
year that this model pistol became the standard-issue side arm for the United States armed forces. After its
manufacture in 1911, Fromme's pistol was sent to Rock Island Arsenal in Illinois and has a serial number of 94854.
The pistol was used in the U.S. Army
and later sold as a government surplus in 1913. Although the pistol used Colt .45
ammunition, at the time of the assassination attempt the Colt .45 was not
considered a common crime gun because "it's
rather large, and not easily concealed."
Harold E. "Zeke"/"Manny" Boro,
born 1909, was a retired federal government engineering draftsman who, at
ages 65 to 66, hung around the Manson family and supplied them with money as a "sugar daddy." Boro met Fromme in the spring of 1974 while in Sacramento Park. Fromme would
visit Boro at his apartment in Sacramento. In return for her friendship, Boro
loaned his Cadillac to Fromme and later bought a red 1973 Volkswagen for her
after she wrecked his Cadillac. On July 12, 1975, Boro moved from Sacramento to
Jackson, California, at the end of Laughton Lane. While at his apartment in
Jackson, Fromme asked Boro for a gun. Fromme told Boro that she needed one in
her apartment house where she lived, with two roommates, for protection from
Manson's enemies. Boro had the pistol along with half a box of ammunition,
containing 25 rounds, and showed Fromme how to pull the hammer back and fire
the pistol. Boro also had a pistol catalog in his apartment and allowed Fromme
to look through it to select a different pistol for Boro to buy for Fromme.
After that, Fromme walked out with the Colt .45, ammunition, and magazine,
despite Boro's protest that she not take the pistol and other items.
Ford's activities the
day before the assassination attempt
On September 4, 1975, the day before Fromme's assassination
attempt in Sacramento, Ford was in Washington D.C. In the morning, he met with National Security Advisor and Secretary of
State Henry Kissinger – a meeting that still was under national security
restriction as of 2012. After the meeting, Ford flew the "Spirit of '76" from Andrews Air Force Base to Boeing
Field in Seattle, Washington, to attend a Republican Party fundraising convention, tour the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center,
and attend a conference on domestic and economic affairs. At about 5:00 p.m.,
Ford then flew to Portland, Oregon, where he attended a Republican fundraising
event, attended the Portland Youth
Bicentennial Rally with about 13,000 children, and received an Oregon blanket
gift. At 9:30 p.m., Ford flew to McClellan Air Force Base in Sacramento,
California, and went to his suite at 11:30 p.m. at the Senator Hotel.
Assassination attempt
On the morning of September 5, 1975, Fromme, dressed
completely in red, "for the animals
and earth colors," placed the Colt .45 pistol into a leg holster
strapped to her left leg, and made her way from her apartment to the California
state capitol grounds. At 9:26 am, Ford returned to the Senator Hotel at 1121 L Street
(38°34′39″N 121°29′31″W) from his two-hour speaking engagement at the Host
Breakfast. From his suite at the Senator
Hotel, Ford crossed L Street,
also known as Lincoln Highway, at
10:02 am into Capitol Park and began
shaking hands with people who had gathered in a crowd on the park's pathway.
Ford was making his way toward an entrance of the state capitol building.
Ford had moved about 150 feet (46 m) from Lincoln Street along a Capitol Park paved walkway, saw "a woman in a brightly colored
dress," and stopped approximately halfway to the state Capitol. People
on either side of Ford wanted to shake hands with him and Ford assumed that the
woman in red wanted to shake hands or talk. Twenty-six-year-old Fromme was
positioned two feet (0.61 m) from Ford, behind the first row of the crowd, and
reached into her robe, drawing the Colt .45 pistol from her leg holster. Fromme
raised her right arm towards Ford, through the front row of people, and pointed
the gun at a height between Ford's knees and his waist. From Ford's
perspective, he noted, "... as I
stopped, I saw a hand come through the crowd in the first row, and that was the
first active gesture that I saw, but in the hand there was a gun."
The pistol contained ammunition stored in a detachable
magazine in the pistol's grip, but the gun did not include a round in the gun's
chamber. At the time, Fromme was not aware that she needed to pull back the gun
slide to insert a cartridge into the pistol's chamber. Five years later in
1980, from Federal Prison Camp, Alderson,
and Fromme claimed that she purposely ejected the top round from the
pistol's magazine onto the floor of her P Street apartment because she "was not determined to kill the
guy."
While Fromme pointed the gun at Ford, several people heard a
"metallic click" sound. As
she shouted, "It wouldn't go
off," Secret Service agent
Larry Buendorf grabbed the gun, forced it from Fromme's hand, and brought
her to the ground. On the ground, Fromme said, "It didn't go off. Can you believe it? It didn't go off."
One of the Secret Service agents shouted "Get
down, let's go." Secret Service agents then half-dragged Ford away
from Fromme towards the east entrance of the Capitol, until Ford yelled, "Put me down! Put me down!"
Ford continued his walk to the California state house, entered, and then met
with California Governor Jerry Brown at 10:06 a.m. for 30 minutes without
mentioning the assassination attempt until they were through talking business.
Ford, who later indicated that he was not scared, concluded, "I thought I'd better get on with my
day's schedule."
Aftermath
Following the attempt, the Secret Service would not allow reporters or photographers near the
president during his next trip to California.[ On September 20, 1975, United States federal judge Thomas J.
MacBride set November 4, 1975, for the start of the trial against Fromme
for attempting to assassinate a U.S. president. Three days before the trial began;
President Ford gave a videotaped testimony from the White House as a defense witness in the trial of Fromme. The
testimony was the first time a U.S. president testified at a criminal trial.
On November 4, the prosecutors were ready to present about
1,000 items of evidence seized from Fromme's car and apartment just after the
assassination attempt, including .45-caliber ammunition in the box she took
from Boro and the book, The Modern Handgun.
During the trial, Fromme refused to cooperate, going so far as to throw an
apple at prosecuting U.S. attorney
Dwayne Keyes after he urged that Fromme's punishment be severe because she
had shown herself to be "full of
hate and violence."
The trial ended on November 19, 1975, with Fromme being
convicted of attempting to assassinate President Ford. Fromme received a life
sentence. During her imprisonment, Fromme escaped from prison and, as a result,
received extra time to her sentence after her capture two days later, on December
26, 1987.
Betty Ford
revealed in a 2004 interview on Larry King
Live that following the attempt on her husband's life by Fromme, each time
he left the White House she would
pray for his safety on one of the White House's balconies. The Sacramento
assassination attempt was the first assassination attempt against Ford during
his presidency. On September 22, 1975, 17 days after Fromme attempted to kill
Ford in Sacramento, Sara Jane Moore,
a political radical attempted to kill Ford in San Francisco. This second
assassination attempt also failed and, two days later, California Governor Jerry Brown responded to both assassination
attempts on Ford's life in California by signing into law bills imposing
mandatory sentences for persons convicted of using guns in committing serious
crimes and requiring purchasers of guns to wait 15 days for delivery. Ford went
on to complete his 1974–77 presidency without further assassination attempts.
In 1981, the Gerald
R. Ford Presidential Museum was dedicated in Ford's hometown of Grand
Rapids, Michigan. On August 23, 1989, the Office
of the United States Attorney in Sacramento donated Squeaky Fromme's pistol
to the museum. Ford died of natural causes on December 26, 2006.
Fromme was released from prison on August 14, 2009, two
years and eight months after Ford's death. She moved to Marcy, New York, to
live in a house that "looks like an
old metal Quonset hut from the World War II era" with Robert Valdner, another convict, who
had killed his brother-in-law and was released from prison in 1992.
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