Assassination of Robert Kennedy in 1968: the governor of California refuses to release his murderer


By SudOuest.fr with AFP

According to the governor, the detainee still constitutes today, at the age of 77, “a threat to public safety”

The governor of California on Thursday rejected the parole of Sirhan Sirhan, the assassin of Robert Kennedy in 1968, to which a specialized commission had nevertheless given the green light last summer. Governor Gavin Newsom notably considered that the detainee, aged 77, still constituted “a threat to public safety” and that he refused “to accept his responsibility in this crime”, notes a press release from his services.

Sirhan Sirhan, 77 years old today, was found guilty on April 17, 1969 of the murder of the senator from New York, younger brother of John Fitzgerald Kennedy. He was sentenced to death but his sentence was commuted to life imprisonment in 1972, following a brief abolition of capital punishment in California. Last August, the California parole board finally gave its approval for Sirhan Sirhan’s release from prison, after having refused it fifteen times.

“Not the necessary lucidity”

This decision then had to be submitted to the governor who had the power to refuse or modify it. “The assassination of Senator Kennedy by Sirhan Sirhan is among the most notorious crimes in American history,” Governor Newsom wrote. “After decades in prison, he still hasn’t corrected the flaws that led him to assassinate Senator Kennedy. Mr. Sirhan does not have the lucidity necessary to prevent him from making the same dangerous decisions as in the past”, he continues.

Palestinian immigrant Sirhan Sirhan had assassinated “Bobby” Kennedy at the Ambassador Hotel in Los Angeles, while the senator was campaigning for the Democratic nomination for the presidential election. Five other people were injured. The murderer had at the time justified his gesture by the support given by Robert Kennedy to the sale of military planes to Israel. Sirhan Sirhan had claimed that he had drunk too much the night of the crime and that he would have liked “that nothing had happened”.



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