On June 5th, 1968, at L.A.s Ambassador Hotel, Robert F. Kennedy celebrated his victory in the California Democratic primary with a rousing victory speech anticipating a successful run for the presidency. Moments later, gunshots shattered that dream: like his brother before him, Bobby Kennedy lay mortally wounded at the hand of an assassin. The police quickly apprehended Sirhan Sirhan, who the world believed had single-handedly masterminded the shooting. Shockingly, that may not be so, as documentary filmmaker Shane O Sullivan presents powerful new evidence to the contrary.
InWho Killed Bobby?OSullivan makes a stunning case that will fundamentally alter the way the public views Bobby Kennedys death. Based on research he undertook for a documentary that will debut this year, OSullivan poses such key questions as:
- Could Sirhan have fired the fatal shot? After the autopsy LA County Coroner Thomas Noguchi concluded that the deadly shots had been fired from an inch behind Kennedys right ear; yet not a single witness placed Sirhan this close; most placed his gun several feet away, and in front of the senator.
- Who was the girl in the polka-dot dress? Vincent Di Pierro saw Sirhan with a girl in a polka-dot dress in the pantry. And Sandra Serrano described a similar woman fleeing down a fire escape, exclaiming, We shot him! We shot him! OSullivan presents new interviews with these key witnesses and details how the LAPD browbeat them into changing their stories, while investigators also insisted to the press that no such person ever existed.
- Was Sirhan an unwitting assassin operating under the direction of unseen manipulators? Sirhan repeatedly scrawled RFK Must Die in his notebook and recreated the same kind of automatic writing when later hypnotized by his defense team. OSullivan cites psychiatric evidence that Sirhan was an extremely susceptible hypnotic subject, whose behavior on the night of the shooting fit the profile of a programmed assassin. Was Sirhan programmed to be a decoy for the real killer of Bobby Kennedy?
The recent release of the film Bobby, the 40th anniversary of the shooting, and OSullivans upcoming documentary have created renewed interest in the subject, and readers who accepted the conventional wisdom will have their beliefs shaken.