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- November 30, 1981NATIONDeath Attempt
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- Hinckley survives a suicide try
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- This time, John Hinckley was resolved that a death would occur.
- He had failed to kill President Reagan on a Washington sidewalk
- last March, and he had failed to kill himself two months
- later, in a North Carolina prison, by taking an overdose of
- painkillers. In the stockade at Fort Meade, Md., last week,
- Hinckley jammed the lock to his cell with a piece of cracker-box
- cardboard. Then he stood on a chair, knotted one sleeve of an
- Army field jacket around his neck and the other to an iron
- window bar and, as U.S. marshals shouted at him and struggled
- vainly to open the door, stepped off the chair. Hinckley, 26,
- hung for several minutes before a frantic marshal could climb
- an exterior wall and reach through a window to cut him loose
- from outside. For the next half-hour Hinckley lay on his cell
- floor, blue-faced and convulsive for lack of oxygen, before
- firemen using a hydraulic bolt cutter could get through the
- cell's bars. Again the loser had been unsuccessful; two days
- later Hinckley was in satisfactory condition in the base
- hospital, watching TV. But the possibility that he had suffered
- brain damage was not ruled out. Says a Justice Department
- spokesman: "It is too soon to assess if his mental abilities
- will be affected."
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- According to Hinckley's parents, the suicide attempt was no
- surprise; they say they had warned federal authorities two days
- earlier that their son urgently needed counseling. Said an
- angry, John Hinckley Sr.: "They told me it wasn't necessary,
- that it could wait. He has been constantly interrogated for
- seven months. Anyone would be desperate after going through all
- that." Replied a Justice official: "He is getting adequate
- [psychiatric] treatment."
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- By coincidence, two days after the suicide attempt, a federal
- district court ruled in favor of two Hinckley defense motions.
- Judge Barrington Parker said that the suspect's Constitutional
- rights were twice violated by the Government; first, just after
- his arrest, when federal officials continued questioning him
- even after Hinckley asked for a lawyer, and again in july, when
- guards seized Hinckley's diaries from his cell. The illegally
- obtained evidence, Parker ruled, cannot be used to prove
- Hinckley guilty of the March shooting, the particulars of which
- the defense has already admitted. But Parker left unclear
- whether he would allow the evidence to be used to buttress the
- prosecution's contention that Hinckley was sane at the time of
- the shooting. His trial is scheduled to begin Jan. 4.
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