Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Reagan gunman Hinckley to get full release after 41 years

- By Jessica Gresko

WASHINGTON — John Hinckley Jr., who shot President Ronald Reagan in 1981, is “no longer a danger to himself or others” and will be freed from court oversight this month as planned, a federal judge said Wednesday, capping Hinckley’s four-decade journey through the legal and mental health systems.

U.S. District Court Judge Paul Friedman had freed Hinckley in September from all remaining restrictio­ns but said his order wouldn’t take effect until June 15. Wednesday’s final hearing was scheduled to ensure Hinckley was continuing to do well in the community in Virginia where he has lived for years.

Hinckley did not attend the final hearing, and the judge made no changes to his plans to give Hinckley full freedom from court oversight.

“He’s been scrutinize­d. He’s passed every test. He’s no longer a danger to himself or others,” Friedman said at a hearing that lasted about an hour. Friedman devoted much of the hearing to talking about the “long road” of the case, to which he was randomly assigned two decades ago, as the third judge to be involved in the case.

He noted that Hinckley, who turned 67 on Sunday, was profoundly troubled when he tried to kill the president, coming “very close to doing so.” But Hinckley has shown no signs of active mental illness since the mid-1980s, the judge repeated Wednesday, and has exhibited no violent behavior or interest in weapons.

“I am confident that Mr. Hinckley will do well in the years remaining to him,” the judge said. He noted that lawyers for the government and Hinckley have fought for years over whether Hinckley should be given increasing amounts of freedom. “It took us a long time to get here,” he said, adding there is now unanimous agreement: “This is the time to let John Hinckley move on with his life, so we will.”

Hinckley was confined to a mental hospital in Washington for more than two decades after a jury found him not guilty by reason of insanity in shooting Reagan. The shooting was fueled by his obsession with the 1976 movie “Taxi Driver” and its co-star, Jodie Foster, who portrayed a teenage prostitute. In the movie, the main character at one point attempts to kill a presidenti­al candidate.

Starting in 2003 Friedman began allowing Hinckley to spend longer and longer stretches in the community, with requiremen­ts such as therapy attendance and restrictio­ns on where he can travel. He’s been living full time in Virginia since 2016, though still under restrictio­ns.

Some of those include: allowing officials access to his electronic devices, email and online accounts; being barred from traveling to places where he knows there will be someone protected by the Secret Service; and giving three days’ notice if he wants to travel more than 75 miles from his home in Virginia.

Hinckley’s longtime lawyer, Barry Levine, said the case had “started with a troubled young man who inflicted great harm” but that, in the end, “I think we have salvaged a life.”

Levine said his client hopes to pursue a career in music and has “real talent.” In July, Hinckley — who plays guitar and sings and has shared his music on a YouTube channel — plans to give a concert in the Brooklyn borough of New York.

Reagan recovered from the March 30, 1981, shooting, but his press secretary, James Brady, who died in 2014, was partially paralyzed as a result. Secret Service agent Timothy McCarthy and Washington police Officer Thomas Delahanty were also wounded. Reagan died in 2004.

On Wednesday, Reagan’s foundation issued a statement opposing the lifting of restrictio­ns.

“The Reagan Foundation and Institute is both saddened and concerned that John Hinckley Jr. will soon be unconditio­nally released and intends to pursue a music career for profit,” the statement read. It concluded, “We strongly oppose his release into society where he apparently seeks to make a profit from his infamy.”

 ?? BARRY THUMMA/AP 1981 ?? Federal marshals escort would-be Reagan assassin John Hinckley Jr. in Quantico, Va. Hinckley will be freed from all court restrictio­ns later this month.
BARRY THUMMA/AP 1981 Federal marshals escort would-be Reagan assassin John Hinckley Jr. in Quantico, Va. Hinckley will be freed from all court restrictio­ns later this month.

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