John Hinckley gains full freedom 41 years after Ronald Reagan assassination attempt
John Hinckley, the man who shot former US president Ronald Reagan in 1981 was given full freedom on June 15. This move was made six years after he was released from a psychiatric hospital. Hinckley no longer presented a threat. A court in Washington had ruled earlier this month that after decades of treatment and […]
John Hinckley, the man who shot former US president Ronald Reagan in 1981 was given full freedom on June 15. This move was made six years after he was released from a psychiatric hospital. Hinckley no longer presented a threat. A court in Washington had ruled earlier this month that after decades of treatment and psychiatric reviews.
He tweeted, “After 41 years 2 months, and 15 days, FREEDOM AT LAST!!!” Hinckley is now 67. He shot Reagan and three others with a revolver outside a Washington hotel on March 30, 1981. This man said that he wanted to impress actress Jodie Foster, with whom he became obsessed after watching her in the film “Taxi Driver.” All four people he shot survived. However, Reagan press secretary James Brady was left partially paralyzed and forced to use a wheelchair.
Legal proceedings against Hinckley
Hinckley was declared not guilty on grounds of insanity. He was then admitted to St. Elizabeth Hospital. It is a psychiatric institution in Washington, and for 34 years he stayed there. This man was released in September 2016 but required to live with his elderly mother in a gated community in Virginia. He was under a long list of restrictions.
Some included controls on his movements and monitoring of his electronic devices and online accounts. He was also forbidden to contact Foster. Moreover, he was not allowed to travel to any area where a current or former president, vice president, or member of Congress would be present. Nor could Hinckley speak to the media or post anything on the internet. He cannot display them in person without authorization. A government report on his status was filed to the court on May 19. It informed his mental health had “remained stable” and that his psychiatric illness had been in “full and sustained remission for decades.”
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