The Post

Busboy who aided wounded Kennedy dead at 68

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When Robert F. Kennedy decided to duck through the kitchen of the Ambassador Hotel in Los Angeles after declaring victory in the 1968 Democratic presidenti­al primary, Juan Romero reveled at his good fortune.

It meant the 18-year-old busboy might get to shake hands with his hero — the man he’d assured himself would be the next president of the United States — for the second time in two days.

Romero had just grasped Kennedy’s hand when gunshots rang out, one of them striking the senator in the head.

Kennedy would die the next day and the teenage Mexican immigrant who had idolised him would carry the emotional burden of that encounter for most of his life.

‘‘I remember him one time saying he felt guilty,’’ his daughter, Josefina Guerra, said yesterday. ‘‘He thought it was his fault.’’

Her father explained: ‘‘If I wouldn’t have extended my hand, he wouldn’t have gotten shot,’’ she said.

Romero died yesterday in a Modesto, California, hospital following a heart attack, Rigo Chacon, a longtime family friend and former TV newsman said yesterday. He was 68.

For decades, each time Romero saw black-and-white news photos of himself — a baby-faced busboy gently cradling Kennedy as he lay sprawled on the hotel’s concrete kitchen floor — he would wonder what more he should have done to save Kennedy.

Only recently, he said during rare interviews this year, did he finally come to terms with that struggle. He said he still carried the example Kennedy had set as he campaigned for equality and civil rights.

He was working at the Ambassador Hotel the day before the June 1968 California primary when Kennedy and his aides ordered room service and he was called on to help deliver it.

‘‘All I remember was that I kept staring at him with my mouth open,’’ he would say later.

Finally, Kennedy approached, grabbed Romero’s hand with both of his and said, ‘‘Thank you.’’

‘‘I will never forget the handshake and the look ... looking right at you with those piercing eyes that said, ‘I’m one of you. We’re good,’’’ Romero said.

‘‘He wasn’t looking at my skin, he wasn’t looking at my age ... he was looking at me as an American.’’

After Kennedy won the primary he thanked supporters in the hotel’s Embassy Room then cut through the kitchen for a meeting with reporters.

Romero jumped at the chance to meet him again.

After gunfire rang out and Kennedy fell, Romero cradled his bleeding head.

‘‘Is everybody OK?’’ asked. Romero said yes.

‘‘Everything will be OK,’’ the senator replied shortly before losing consciousn­ess.

As they talked, Romero pressed a set of Rosary beads into the senator’s hand as news photograph­ers franticall­y took pictures. Kennedy died in hospital the next day aged 42.

‘‘It was a really dramatic picture with the light coming in from the side, they were strong photos,’’ Pulitzer Prize-winning photograph­er David Hume Kennerly said yesterday.

‘‘But really the heart of it,’’ Kennerly added, ‘‘was this unknown person was there to help Senator Kennedy when he was down. That’s what has always struck me about those photos.’’ Kennedy

 ??  ?? Juan Romero holds a Los Angeles Times photograph that shows his with Senator Robert F. Kennedy at the Ambassador hotel in Los Angeles moments after Kennedy was shot. Romero was a busboy in June 1968 when Kennedy walked through the Ambassador Hotel kitchen after his victory in the California presidenti­al primary and an assassin shot him in the head. He held the mortally wounded Kennedy as he lay on the ground, struggling to keep the senator’s bleeding head from hitting the floor.
Juan Romero holds a Los Angeles Times photograph that shows his with Senator Robert F. Kennedy at the Ambassador hotel in Los Angeles moments after Kennedy was shot. Romero was a busboy in June 1968 when Kennedy walked through the Ambassador Hotel kitchen after his victory in the California presidenti­al primary and an assassin shot him in the head. He held the mortally wounded Kennedy as he lay on the ground, struggling to keep the senator’s bleeding head from hitting the floor.

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