Hinckley – Bush Family Friend

 By von A. Weist   11-28-3

John Hinckley Jr., who shot Ronald Reagan in 1981, is    about to be partially released from confinement after testimony from government    psychiatrists. Hinckley’s family and the family of President George W.    Bush have long, complicated ties that have been little reported. Hinckley’s    brother was scheduled to have dinner at the home of the current President    Bush’s brother the day after the assassination attempt.    
     
     
Nov. 26, 2003 – John Hinckley Jr., who has been hospitalized    since shooting President Ronald Reagan in 1981, might receive permission    any day from a federal judge to make unsupervised visits to his parents’    home. Hinckley’s family and the family of President George W. Bush have    long social, political, and economic ties that have been little reported.    Hinckley’s brother was scheduled to have dinner at the home of the current    President Bush’s brother the day after the assassination attempt.    
     
U.S. District Judge Paul Friedman recently said he would    let John W. Hinckley, Jr., make the visits with certain restrictions, but    he first wanted to hear testimony officials at St. Elizabeths Hospital,    where Hinckley is being treated. Today that condition was met when Paul    Montalbano of St. Elizabeths testified that Hinckley is ready for visits    under conditions recommended by government experts.    
     
Today also, John Hinckley, Jr.’s, bid for unsupervised    visits with his parents received a further boost as two psychiatrists testifying    for the government said the request from the man who shot President Reagan    should be approved but only under more restrictions than previously proposed.    
     
The families of Ronald Reagan and James Brady, his press    secretary, who received a head wound (and whose wife successfully promoted    the gun-control Brady Bill), have opposed the release. Just after the shooting,    Hinckley’s family made an assurance similar to those being made now, saying    through an attorney, “recent evaluations alerted no one to the seriousness    of his condition.”    
     
Hinckley has been confined to the St. Elizabeths Hospital    in Washington, DC, since he shot Reagan three others. The visists would    be to his parents’ home in Williamsburg, Virginia. He was tried for the    incident but acquitted by reason of insanity after his lawyer, the legendary    Edward Bennett Williams, argued that Hinckley shot the president to impress    actress Jody Foster.    
     
Vice president George H.W. Bush, father of the current    president, George Bush, Jr., assumed the duties of the presidency briefly    after the shooting and nearly became president as Reagan almost died from    the shooting. A bullet missed his aorta by less than an inch.    
     
The Bush and Hinckley families go back to the oil-wildcatting    days of the 1960s in Texas. (Ironically, they go back even farther in a    genealogical sense, since the have a common ancestor in Samuel Hinckley,    who lived in the late 1600s.)    
     
The relationship was much closer between George Bush,    Sr., and John Hinckley, Sr., whose families were neighbors for years in    Houston. John Hinckley, Sr., contributed to the political campaigns of    Bush, Sr., all the way back to Bush’s running for Congress, and he supported    Bush against Reagan for the 1980 Republican presidential nomination. Bush,    Sr., and Hinckley, Sr., were both in the oil business. When the Hinckley    oil company, Vanderbilt Oil, started to fail in the 1960s, Bush, Sr.’s,    Zapata Oil financially bailed out Hinckley’s sompany. Hinckley had been    running an operation with six dead wells, but he began making several milliion    dollars a year after the Bush bailout.    
     
Scott Hinckley, John’s brother, was scheduled to have    dinner at the Denver home of Neil Bush, Bush, Sr.’s, son (and of course    the current president’s brother) the day after the shooting. At the time,    Neil Bush was a Denver-based purchaser of mineral rights for Amoco, and    Scott Hinckley was the vice president of his father’s Denver-based oil    business.    
     
On the day of the shooting, NBC news anchor John Chancellor,    eyebrows raised, informed the viewers of the nightly news that the man    who tried to kill the president was acquainted with the son of the man    who would have become president had the attack succeeded. As a matter of    fact, Chancellor reported in a bewildered tone, Scott Hinckley and Neil    Bush had been scheduled to have dinner together at the home of the (then)    vice-president’s son (Neil) the very next night.    
     
The story of the Bush-Hinckley connection was reported    on the AP and UPI newswires and in some newspapers, including the Houston    Post, which apparently originated the story. It was also reported in Newsweek    magazine. Then the story about one of the strangest coincidences in presidential    assassination history simply disappeared. (The AP story is quoted in its    entirety at the end of this article, not for commercial use but solely    to be used for the educational purposes of research and open discussion.)    
     
In reference to whether the current president, George    W. Bush, knew the would-be assassin, John Hinckley, Bush said at the time,    “It’s certainly conceivable that I met him or might have been introduced    to him. I don’t recognize his face from the brief, kind of distorted thing    they had on TV and the name doesn’t ring any bells. I know he wasn’t on    out staff. I could check our volunteer rolls.” There is no record    that he ever did this or ever commented after further reflection and seeing    better photographs.    
     
Neil Bush used a similar line in denying he knew John    Hinckley. “I have no idea,” he said. “I don’t recognize    any pictures of him. I just wish I could see a better picture of him.”    Besides all of the family ties, Neil Bush lived in Lubbock, Texas, throughout    much of 1978, where Reagan shooter Hinckley lived from 1974-1980. During    this period, in 1978, Neil Bush served as campaign manager for the current    president’s unsuccessful run for Congress.    
     
Neil’s wife, Sharon Bush, who is writing an expose of    the family, said, at the time, that Scott Hinckley was coming as a date    of a girl friend of hers. “I don’t even know the brother. From what    I’ve heard, they are a very nice family and have given a lot of money to    the Bush campaign. I understand he was just the renegade brother in the    family.”    
     
The dinner date was canceled. (If it hadn’t been, it    would have been the ultimate case of “Guess who’s coming to Dinner?”)    
     
Ironically, Scott Hinckley was called on the carpet by    the U.S. Department of Enegy on the day Reagan was shot. The DOE told Hinckley    it might place a $2 million penalty on his company.    
     
The following AP story is quoted not for commercial use    but solely to be used for the educational purposes of research and open    discussion.    
     
FAMILY ‘DESTROYED’ BY ASSASSINATION ATTEMPT    
     
By JOHN MOSSMAN, Associated Press Writer, the Associated    Press, April 1, 1981, PM Cycle    
     
EVERGREEN, Colo. The parents of John W. Hinckley, Jr.,    “just destroyed” by their son’s alleged assassination attempt    on President Reagan, hope to see him “as soon as possible” but    have no definite travel plans, their attorney said. The Hinckleys, through    attorney James Robinson, issued a brief statement Tuesday expressing their    “deep concern” for President Reagan and all those involved in    Monday’s shooting, including their son, John. Robinson said the Hinckleys    had spoken to their son Monday night and Tuesday afternoon and were trying    to hire a Washington lawyer for him. It was confirmed later in Washington    that the Hinckleys had retained the law firm of millionaire defense attorney    Edward Bennett Williams.    
     
The Hinckleys said they planned to see their son “as    soon as possible, but at this time they have no definite travel plans worked    out,” Robinson said. They sent “personal expressions of sorrow”    to the wounded men and their families, he said. The Hinckleys reiterated    through Robinson that they have provided psychiatric care for their son    in the past, adding that “recent evaluations alerted no one to the    seriousness of his condition.”    
     
William Sells, the Hinckleys’ next door neighbor and    in whose home the Hinckleys were staying Tuesday, said the couple was “just    destroyed” by their son’s arrest and the attempt made on Reagan’s    life.    
     
In Washington, an aide to Vice President George Bush    disputed a Houston Post report that the Hinckleys made large contributions    to Bush’s presidential campaign. The aide, Shirley Green, said no record    of such a contribution could be found.    
     
The Houston newspaper also reported that Scott Hinckley    was to have dined Tuesday night in Denver at the home of Neil Bush, on    of the vice president’s sons. Neil Bush’s wife Sharon said Scott Hinckley    was coming to their house as the date of one of her girlfriends. “I    don’t even know the brother,” she said. “I understand he was    just the renegade brother in the family. They must feel awful.”    
     
The FBI investigated a bomb threat directed against the    Hinckleys on Tuesday, but nothing came of it.    
     
The senior Hinckley is described by associates as a devout    Christian who belonged to a weekly Bible reading club and recently did    work in Africa for a Christian service organization.    
     
John Hinckley and his wife stayed at their next-door    neighbor’s house all day Tuesday as 70 reporters assembled on the front    lawn and gawkers drove slowly past.    
     
A statement for counsel for Vanderbilt Energy Corp. said    the elder Hickley had “temporarily relinquished his duties” as    chairman for the Denver-based firm “because of a tragedy involving    a member of his family.” John Hinckley, Jr., 25, who was arrested    seconds after Reagan was shot in Washington, was being held Tuesday at    a Marine base in Quantico, Va. The corporate statement did not mention    any change for Scott Hinckley, vice president of operations for Vanderbilt    and brother of John, Jr.    
     
The father’s move came amid confirmation that the Department    of Energy was reviewing Vanderbilt’s books. Jack Vandenberg, a DOE spokesman    in Washington, said auditors met with Scott Hinckley in Denver on Monday.    The Washington Star quoted an unnamed “White House official”    as confirming that DOE auditors asked for an explanation of an overcharge    when oil price controls were in effect between 1973 and 1981. The Star    said DOE auditors told Scott Hinckley there was a possible penalty of $2    million for the overcharge.    
     
End of Associated Press story from April 1, 1981. The    above AP story is quoted not for commercial use but solely to be used for    the educational purposes of research and open discussion.

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