Charlie Kirk had barely been declared dead this week when the internet exploded with cries of anger and blame. Surely a far-left loon had killed Kirk, the conservative firebrand. If not, leftists had been "poisoning the minds" of Americans for years, creating the atmosphere for violence, asserted Fox News' Sean Hannity. |
As a Californian, one of my childhood memories was of the killing of Robert F. Kennedy in Los Angeles. My most unforgettable interview as a cub reporter was with Sara Jane Moore, the suburban homemaker and sometime accountant who tried to shoot President Ford. Those experiences and many others leave me wondering how so many people are so certain they know the motive for Kirk's slaying. |
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Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, D-N.Y., speaks to campaign workers, June 5, 1968, as his wife Ethel, left, and California campaign manager and speaker of the California Assembly, Jesse Unruh, look on, at the Ambassador Hotel in Los Angeles. (Associated Press) |
More than 24 hours after the killing, authorities have released only a picture of a thin young man in black clothes and dark glasses, a person of interest in their investigation. No homicidal manifesto has been uncovered. No social media ravings exposed. Yet it remains a (all too predictable) marvel that so many people seem so sure they know just what the killer was thinking. |
I was a pup of 23 when I visited the federal prison in Pleasanton, Calif., to interview Moore about her failed attempt to gun down Ford outside a San Francisco hotel in 1975. When I look at the yellowed news clipping today, I see the San Ramon Valley Herald's photo of a fierce-eyed Moore, glaring at the camera. |
Moore had tended a home in Danville, a quiet suburban town over the hill from Oakland. She had worked her way through five marriages and in her 40s fallen in with far-left political groups. She also had become an FBI informant. |
"I did something that I have tried to keep from doing since," the woman whom friends called "Sally" told me back then. "I had boxed myself into a little box and I was reading things only that agreed with me and …. talking to the already convinced. I was deliberately ignoring and becoming blind and deaf to anything that did not" agree with her worldview. |
The FBI had asked Moore to infiltrate radical organizations but then the agency severed its relationship with her, four months before the shooting. She became convinced the feds wanted her dead, she told another interviewer back then. "I was going to go down anyway," Moore said. "If the government was going to kill me, I was going to make some kind of statement." Moore also told me she thought she might get away with it, because the public so routinely underestimated women. |
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1975, September 5 - Second Floor - West Sitting Hall - The White House - Washington, DC - Gerald R. Ford, Betty Ford, Jack Ford, Steve Ford - seated, watching television (not shown) - Watching Television Coverage of the Assassination Attempt by Lynette "Squeaky" Fromme. (David Hume Kennerly / Ford Library Museum) |
So, 17 days after another extremist, Lynette "Squeaky" Fromme, tried but failed to take a shot at President Ford as he walked near the state Capitol in Sacramento, Moore fired a single shot at the president. A bystander shoved her at the last moment, perhaps causing the shot to miss by roughly 5 feet. |
Did she try to kill Ford to please her radical friends? Because she thought the FBI was coming for her? Because she felt like a woman for too long ignored? The 50th anniversary of the Sept. 22, 1975, assassination attempt looms, and it feels like we're no closer to a single, clear answer. |
Which, again, makes me wonder why so many of those opining on Kirk's senseless death, including President Trump, are so sure they know just what caused it. In Wednesday's Oval Office address, the president blamed the "radical left" and then listed a string of attacks on Republicans, including the shooting that could have killed him last year. |
Trump seemed to have forgotten that violence has been visited on liberals too. He did not mention the assassination of a Democratic state lawmaker from Minnesota and her husband, the hammer attack on Rep. Nancy Pelosi's husband, or the arson assault on the home of Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro and his family. |
The Nashville Banner interviewed the now-95-year-old Moore after the attempt on Trump's life last year. She said she had felt like a character in a play the day she tried to kill the president. Paroled years ago, Moore is living in Tennessee. Her motivations remained cloudy. "I've deliberately not thought a lot about it," Moore said. |
In contrast, a group called the Independent Center has thought about political violence. An organization that speaks out for independent voters, the center on Thursday said, enough already, to the vitriolic rhetoric after Kirk's death. The group's statement concluded: "We call on our political leaders, Republican and Democratic alike, to seek … de-escalation and reconciliation." |
The week's biggest stories |
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Authorities released this photo of a "person of interest" in the fatal shooting of Charlie Kirk at Utah Valley University. (FBI) |
Charlie Kirk shooting: What else we know |
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A Pasadena man recounts 13 days in ICE's "basement" |
- Rami Othmane spoke with The Times about his July 13 arrest and subsequent 13-day detention in harsh conditions while suffering from a brain tumor. The experience, he said, left him altered.
- "I was surrounded by like five or six masked people in unmarked cars," Othmane told The Times. "I kept telling them I have my ID and I'm a green card applicant. … I was following the right procedure."
- He also said his wife, chief of medical staff at Huntington Hospital in Pasadena, received death threats and racist comments while he was detained.
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California lawmakers announce a last-minute climate and energy package |
- After months of negotiation, California legislative leaders have reached an eleventh-hour agreement on a suite of closely watched climate and energy bills.
- It includes reauthorization of California's signature cap-and-trade program and the expansion of a regional electricity market, among other items.
- Among the most prominent items is the extension of California's nation-leading cap-and-trade program beyond its 2030 expiration date to 2045.
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What else is going on |
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Commentary and opinions |
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This morning's must reads |
| Andry HernΓ‘ndez Romero emerged from the Salvadoran mega-prison as a household name. He's now grappling with how to heal from the traumatic ordeal. | | | |
Other must reads |
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Keep up with California | Your support helps us deliver the news that matters most. Subscribe to the Los Angeles Times. | | | | |
For your downtime |
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"The Cortège" runs this month at the Los Angeles Equestrian Center and features large-scale puppets. It is a procession and an exploration of grief. (Emil Ravelo / For The Times) |
Going out |
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Staying in |
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A question for you: What is your favorite place to visit in California during the fall? |
Hilary O'Hara writes, "Buellton, Calif., for the scarecrow contest." |
Email us at essentialcalifornia@latimes.com, and your response might appear in the newsletter this week. |
And finally ... your photo of the day |
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The new Glorya Kaufman Community Center at the Wende Museum in Culver City has a theater where architects tried to preserve the bones of an old A-frame theater. (Manolo Landis) |
Today's great photo is from Times contributor Manolo Landis at the Wende Museum of Cold War History, which recently debuted a $17-million culture and wellness center offering free yoga, meditation, sound baths and therapy. |
Have a great day, from the Essential California team |
Jim Rainey, staff reporter Hugo MartΓn, assistant editor, fast break desk Kevinisha Walker, multiplatform editor Andrew Campa, Sunday writer Karim Doumar, head of newsletters |
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