Montreal Gazette

LIFE IMITATES MOVIE

‘ Hero’ Secret Service agent saved U. S. president Reagan’s life

- D E L Q U E N T I N W I L B E R

WASHINGTON Jerry Parr, the Secret Service agent in charge of Ronald Reagan’s detail who was credited with saving the U.S. president’ s life during the 1981 assassinat­ion attempt, has died. He was 85.

He died Friday, Oct. 9, in a hospice in Washington, according to his wife, Carolyn Parr. The cause was congestive heart failure.

Reagan was 70 days into his first term when he was shot by John W. Hinckley Jr. while leaving the Washington Hilton Hotel after a speech on March 30, 1981. At the sound of gunfire, Parr shoved him into the back of the presidenti­al limousine and shouted “Take off!” to the driver. As the limo raced on Parr’s orders to the White House, the agent inspected Reagan and found no visible wounds. Moments later, the president began complainin­g of chest pain and the agent noticed blood on Reagan’s lips.

Parr redirected the limo to George Washington University Hospital where the president collapsed just steps inside the trauma centre’s doors. Doctors determined Reagan was suffering massive internal bleeding. The president went on to lose more than half of his blood before surgery halted the hemorrhagi­ng. Reagan’s doctors credited

Parr’s actions for saving his life.

“If Jerry Parr took the president to the White House, Ronald Reagan would have died,” said Joseph Giordano, who was the top trauma surgeon at George Washington University Hospital where Reagan was treated. “There is no doubt in my mind. Jerry Parr is a hero.”

In a 2011 interview, Parr said the attempt on Reagan’s life was “my best day and my worst day.” He blamed complacenc­y among security agents for allowing Hinckley to get so close to the president and fire all six rounds from his revolver before being subdued.

Three others were wounded. White House Press Secretary Jim Brady, who suffered a grievous head wound, died in 2014 from

complicati­ons from his injury.

D. C. Police Officer Thomas Delahanty was struck in the back and forced to retire. Secret Service Agent Tim McCarthy took a bullet in the chest that would have hit Parr or Reagan, recovered and returned to his job.

Jerry Studstill Parr was born Sept. 16, 1930, in Montgomery, Ala., the only child of Oliver Parr, a cash- register repairman and Patricia Studstill, a beautician. After the family moved to Miami, his parents divorced.

The future agent’s course in life was set when his father took him to see the 1939 film The Code of the Secret Service starring Ronald Reagan as a dashing lieutenant in the force who smashes a counterfei­t- ing ring. Though Reagan judged the film the worst he ever made, it left a lasting impression on the nineyear- old Parr.

After a stint in the U. S. Air Force and 13 years working as a lineman for an electric company, Parr in 1962 joined the Secret Service. When president John F. Kennedy was slain, Parr was dispatched to Dallas for several weeks to guard the wife and mother of assassin Lee Harvey Oswald. In 1964, he moved to Washington and served in the vice- presidenti­al details for Hubert Humphrey, Spiro Agnew and Walter Mondale. For six months beginning in October 1973, Parr guarded vice- president Gerald Ford.

Parr left the White House in 1982 when he was promoted to assistant director of protective research. He retired in 1985, became a pastor and co- authored a 2013 memoir, In the Secret Service, with his wife.

The assassinat­ion attempt cemented a bond between the Reagans and Parr.

Reagan’s wife, Nancy, said that Parr was “one of my true heroes.”

After Parr’s retirement, he visited the Oval Office, where the wisecracki­ng Reagan said: “You aren’t going to throw me over the couch are you?”

His survivors include his wife, whom he married in 1959, and their three daughters.

 ?? BA R RY T H U MMA / T H E A S S O C I AT E D P R E S S F I L E S ?? Former U. S. president Ronald Reagan bids farewell in 1985 to Jerry Parr, the Secret Service agent he credited with saving his life during an assassinat­ion attempt in 1981.
BA R RY T H U MMA / T H E A S S O C I AT E D P R E S S F I L E S Former U. S. president Ronald Reagan bids farewell in 1985 to Jerry Parr, the Secret Service agent he credited with saving his life during an assassinat­ion attempt in 1981.
 ?? R O N E D MO N D S / T H E A S S O C I AT E D P R E S S F I L E S ?? U. S. president Ronald Reagan is guarded after being shot in 1981. Secret Service agent Jerry Parr, to the right of Reagan, was credited with saving his life.
R O N E D MO N D S / T H E A S S O C I AT E D P R E S S F I L E S U. S. president Ronald Reagan is guarded after being shot in 1981. Secret Service agent Jerry Parr, to the right of Reagan, was credited with saving his life.

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