Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Would-be Reagan assassin Hinckley freed

Released from mental hospital after 35 years, will live with mother

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WASHINGTON — The man who tried to assassinat­e President Ronald Reagan 35 years ago is going home — this time, it seems, for good.

John W. Hinckley Jr. was released from St. Elizabeths Hospital on Saturday morning, the culminatio­n of his decades-long rehabilita­tion in a D.C. mental hospital.

A federal judge ordered his release in July, finding the would-be assassin no longer posed a danger to others after being found not guilty by reason of insanity in the shooting of the president and three others outside a D.C. hotel in 1981.

Hinckley will live with his 90-yearold mother in Williamsbu­rg, Virginia, a community that has been an ambivalent host during the scores of increasing­ly longer visits he has made since 2006. Now, Hinckley, 61, faces the task of putting together a life outside the institutio­n.

At the time of the shooting, Hinckley was a troubled 25-year-old obsessed with actress Jodie Foster and the movie “Taxi Driver.” He began stalking Reagan, and on March 30, 1981, shot the president, Press Secretary James Brady, a U.S. Secret Service agent and a D.C. police officer. Brady suffered brain damage and died from his injuries in 2014. The others recovered from their injuries.

Hinckley’s successful insanity defense before a jury outraged the country and prompted changes that narrowed the applicatio­n of that legal strategy. Reagan later forgave Hinckley.

Some in Kingsmill, the gated Williamsbu­rg community Hinckley will call home, said forgivenes­s is beside the point.

“It’s not a matter of forgivenes­s but a matter of security,” said Joe Mann, a vocal critic of the release who lives about a half-mile from Hinckley’s mother.

Hinckley’s longtime defense attorney Barry Wm. Levine called that “misplaced fear,” citing a lengthy court opinion based on medical experts who testified that Hinckley was stable and had been in remission for more than 27 years.

“If those people who have concerns were fully informed, they’d have nothing to worry about,” said Levine, who confirmed that Hinckley would leave the hospital Saturday.

On the hospital campus Saturday morning, a man who was attending a home-buying conference watched as Hinckley emerged from a secure part of the building to load a small duffel bag, pet carrier and pet food into a waiting SUV. As Hinckley walked past, the man, who did not want to be named, said he heard several people from the hospital saying goodbye to Hinckley.

A hospital official confirmed that all patients scheduled to be discharged Saturday morning had been released.

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