From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Dick Cheney hunting incident occurred on
February 11, 2006, when then U.S. Vice President
Dick Cheney shot Harry
Whittington, a 78-year-old Texas attorney, while participating in a quail hunt on a ranch in Kenedy
County, Texas.[1] Both
Cheney and Whittington call the incident an accident.
First public news of the incident was called in to the Corpus Christi
Caller-Times on February 12, 2006, by ranch owner
Katharine Armstrong.[2
] The Bush
administration disclosed the shooting incident to the public
the afternoon of February 12. Local authorities released a report
on the shooting on February 16, 2006 and witness statements on
February 22.
On February 14, 2006, Whittington suffered a non-fatal "silent" heart attack and atrial
fibrillation due to at least one lead-shot pellet lodged in or
near his heart.[3]
Cheney did not speak publicly about the incident until February 15
in an interview with Fox News.
Shooting
incident
Day of
shooting
The shooting was widely reported to have taken place on Saturday
February 11, 2006, based on the public statements of Katharine
Armstrong, owner of the 50,000-acre (200 km2)
Armstrong Ranch. However, in her written statement to the Sheriff,
she said that the shooting happened on February 12.
Harry Whittington, in his only public statement, said that
"accidents do and will happen – and that’s what happened last
Friday" (February 10).[4]
Whittington has not made another statement or issued a written
statement about the shooting.
Time of
shooting
Mary
Matalin[5] stated
on Meet the
Press that "Somebody had talked to some ranch hand".
Neither the Sheriff's report nor witness statements identify who
this first reporter was.
The Secret Service is[6]
reported to have said they gave notice to the Sheriff about one
hour after the shooting. Kennedy County Sheriff Ramone Salinas
III[7]
states he first heard of the shooting at about 1730 hours from
Captain Charles Kirk, and Salinas implies that he received
'official' notice from the Secret Service at about 1740 hours.
The time of the shooting was not stated by Cheney.[8]
The other members of the hunting party put the time variously
between 1730 hours and 1800 hours.[9]
Cheney states that Whittington was standing on low ground and
that the sun was directly behind Whittington.
The
events
Cheney had a televised interview[8]
about the shooting on February 15. On February 22, the Sheriff's
office released statements from Katherine Armstrong, Sarita
Armstrong, Williford, Oscar Medellin, Gerado Medellin and Andrew
Hubert.[10]
Cheney’s statement and all six of the other hunting party members'
statements specify that:
- Cheney, Whittington and Williford had first shot birds together
in a covey
- While Whittington was searching for a downed bird, Cheney,
Williford and an 'Outrider' (Guide) walked towards another covey
about 100 yards (100 m) away
- Whittington approached to within 30 or 40 yards
(40 m) of the shooters
- A single bird flew up, around and behind Cheney in the
direction of Whittington
- Cheney shot at the bird and hit Whittington
- The shooting occurred somewhere around 1730 hours and 1830
hours.
Armstrong, the ranch owner, claimed that all in the hunting
party were wearing blaze-orange safety gear and none had been
drinking,[11] and
that at lunch they drank beer,[12] which
contradicts her later statement that "there may (have been) a beer
or two in there [the coolers at lunch], but remember not everyone
in the party was shooting."[13]
Cheney has acknowledged that he had one beer four or five hours
prior to the shooting. Armstrong said she never saw Cheney or
Wittington drink until later at the house, when Cheney had a
cocktail.[14]
Armstrong did not actually see the incident happen, believing that
the reason Cheney's security detail was running was that Cheney had
a heart problem,[13]
although Cheney described her as an eyewitness in his Fox
interview.[8]
Secret Service agents and
medical aides, who were traveling with Cheney, came to
Whittington's assistance and treated his birdshot wounds to his
right cheek, neck, and chest. An ambulance standing nearby for the
Vice President took Whittington to nearby Kingsville
before he was flown by helicopter to Corpus Christi Memorial
Hospital in Corpus Christi.
People
present
At the scene:
In a car at an unstated distance away from the shooting:
- Katharine Armstrong, owner of the ranch
- Sara Storey Armstrong Hixon, Armstrong’s sister
Texas Parks and
Wildlife Department report
On February 13, 2006, the Texas Parks and Wildlife Department
(an agency once headed by Armstrong)[15]
issued an incident report.[2
] According to the report, the shooter (Cheney)
"was swinging on game," that is to say, turning to track it with
his gun. The summary of the incident given was:
"Whittington downed a bird and went to retrieve it. While he was
out of the hunting line, another covey was flushed and Cheney swung
on a bird and fired, striking Whittington in the face, neck and
chest."
The report cited clear and sunny weather at the time of the
shooting.
Whittington
injury
Whittington was injured in the face, neck, and upper torso.
Whittington was reported to be in stable condition at Corpus Christi Memorial
Hospital and had been moved from intensive care to a "step-down
unit" on Monday. Doctors had decided to leave up to 200 pieces of
birdshot pellets lodged in his body rather than try to remove them.
Each pellet is less than a tenth of an inch (2.5 mm) in
diameter. Because of their small size, it is hard to pinpoint the
precise location of each pellet with medical imaging.
On February 14, 2006, at 0630 hours, Whittington suffered a
minor heart attack and atrial
fibrillation due to the shot pellets lodged in or near his
heart.[3]
He was immediately moved back to the intensive care unit. At about
0900 hours, Whittingon underwent a cardiac catheterization test to
detect blocked or leaky arteries. From the test, doctors found a
single lead pellet.[16][17]
Hospital officials said Whittington was alert and stable[18]
and that he did not experience chest pain or other symptoms of a
heart attack.[16]
Doctors reported signs of inflammation, and Whittington was treated
with anti-inflammatory drugs.[19]
Whittington was subsequently discharged from the hospital on
February 17, 2006. At a press conference, he said: "My family and I
are deeply sorry for everything Vice President Cheney and his
family have had to deal with. We hope that he will continue to come
to Texas and seek the relaxation that he deserves."
Information
release
Though the shooting occurred on Saturday, February 11, news of
it was not released until after 2 PM, eastern Standard Time on
Sunday, February 12. Kathryn Garcia, a reporter for the Corpus
Christi Caller-Times, broke
the story at 1:48 PM after receiving an 11 AM call from Katharine
Armstrong, the owner of the ranch where the shooting occurred.
Armstrong had notified Cheney earlier in the morning that she was
going to inform the news media about the incident. She said Cheney
agreed.[20]
Armstrong said that Whittington did not announce his location, and
this led to the incident.[16]
According to White House Press secretary Scott
McClellan, news at the White House about the shooting "... was
coming into people back here, all the way at 3 AM in the morning
[Sunday] and beyond."[21]
McClellan would not state when the President first learned that
Cheney had shot Whittington. When McClellan was asked if Andy Card
had told Karl Rove that Cheney was the shooter, McClellan said:
"... we still didn't have all the details at that point and
additional details were coming into Andy Card at even three am in
the morning and beyond."
The White House did not disclose the accident until a press
conference on Sunday afternoon. Peter Banko McClellan said he did
not know that Cheney had shot someone until that Sunday morning. He
remarked that he did ask the Vice President's office to release the
information earlier. He said: "I think you can always look back
at these issues and look at how to do a better job."[20]
On February 15, Cheney agreed to comment publicly about the
accident on the Fox News Channel. He had previously
avoided reporters by leaving an Oval Office meeting with United
Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan.[20]
Cheney visited Whittington in the hospital on Monday, February 13,
and at other times, telephoned him.
On the Fox News interview, Cheney accepted full responsibility
for the accident.
Cheney acknowledged that White House Counselor Dan Bartlett and Scott McClellan
"urged us to get the story out", but Cheney said he was more
concerned about accuracy and felt that Armstrong was the best
person to make the announcement.[22]
Investigation
Secret Service spokesman Eric Zahren said that about an hour
after Whittington was shot, the head of the Secret Service's local
office called the Kenedy County sheriff to report the accident.[6]
Kenedy County Sheriff Ramon Salinas III receiving a call of
'official' notice from the Secret Service 8-10 minutes after a
Saturday, February 11, 5:30 p.m. phone call from Captain Charles
Kirk.[7]
Kirk had called Salinas while en route to the Armstrong Ranch to
investigate a possible hunting accident. The ensuing official
investigation was performed by the Kenedy County Sheriff's
department and published in an Incident Report[7]
written by Chief Deputy Gilberto San Miguel Jr, a Supplement
Report[7]
written by Salinas and several witness statements.[7]
After Salinas finished his call with the Secret Service, Kirk
called Salinas a second time to report that he couldn't get any
information about the shooting at the Armstrong gate. Salinas told
Kirk: "that it was fine and I [Salinas] would contact someone at
the Ranch". Multiple news sources reported that local law
enforcement officers were initially barred by United States Secret
Service agents from interviewing Cheney.[23][24]
After dismissing Kirk, Salinas called a Constable Ramiro
Medellin Jr to ask for information about the accident. None of the
police reports say why Salinas thought to call Medellin, or where
Salinas thought Medellin was. In that first call to Medellin,
Salinas reports Medellin saying only that he would call Salinas
back. Medellin called Salinas back and said that "This is in fact a
hunting accident" and that he [Medellin] had spoken with some of
the people in the hunting party who were eyewitnesses and that they
all said that it was definitely a hunting accident. Salinas says he
[Salinas] also spoke with another [unnamed] eyewitness and he[the
witness] said the same thing, that it was an accident. Salinas
states in his report: "After hearing the same information from
eyewitness and Constable Medellin, it was at this time I decided to
send my Chief Deputy first thing Sunday morning to interview the
Vice-President and other witnesses."
On Sunday morning, Kenedy County Chief Deputy Gilbert San Miguel
Jr. interviewed Cheney and other members of the hunting party. He
said that Cheney characterized the incident as a "hunting
accident".
On Monday, Miguel and Lt Juan J Guzman went to Spohn Memorial
Hospital to interview Whittington.[7]
Whittington requested not to be recorded 'due to his voice being
raspy', but agreed to supply a written affidavit as soon as he
returned home to his office. Whittington characterized the incident
as an accident and said no alcohol was involved and that everyone
was wearing proper hunting attire. Whittington described shooting
at the first covey of quails, searching for a bird, then being sent
by Katharine [Armstrong] to shoot the second covey. At that point,
"a nurse came into the room and asked Guzman and Salinas to hurry
up so Whitington could rest". The officers then left telling
Whittington "I [Miguel] would give him a call in a few days to get
the written affidavit". There is no public record of the promised
affidavit being taken or released.
The Kenedy County Sheriff, Ramon
Salinas III, has since cleared Cheney of any criminal wrongdoing in
the matter[7]
Bush appointed Katharine Armstrong a commission member of the
Texas Parks and Wildlife Department.[25] Steve
Hall, education director for the Texas Parks and Wildlife
Department, said that the department would classify the shooting as
an error in judgment by Cheney.
The news of the shooting wasn't released to the press for 21
hours until 1:48 p.m. (07:48) Sunday, February 12. Kathryn Garcia,
a reporter for the Corpus Christi
Caller-Times, broke the story after receiving a call
from Armstrong at 11am, after confirming it with the White House
and hospital.
A top Republican close to the White House said to Time magazine,
"This is either a cover-up
story or an incompetence story."[26]
Controversial points
Questions have been raised regarding the shooting, even as
Kenedy County Sheriff's Office documents support the official story
by Cheney and his party.[27]
- Recreations of the incident were enacted by George Gongora and
John Metz, a photographer and producer respectively for the Corpus
Christi Caller-Times.[28] Also
a hunter re-created it according to the Whidbey
News-Times. A simulation using many different targets
and distances is [1]. All tests
seemed to prove that the distance was much closer than the
90 feet (27 m) claimed. Many familiar with quail hunting
have also argued that the range was closer,[29] while
others, such as forensic expert Jon Nordby, confirm the
plausibility of the official reports.[30]
- The time of the shooting was estimated by Cheney and the other
members of the hunting party to be variously between 5:30 p.m. and
6 p.m.[8]
[9]
In the Kenedy County Sheriff's Report, Officer Ramone Salinas III
states that he first heard news of the shooting from a Captain
Charles Kirk (fellow officer) at about 5:30 p.m.[31] Kirk
had heard of the shooting prior to that phone call. In Salinas's
statement, Salinas says he received official notice from the Secret
Service 8-10 minutes after the 5:30 p.m. phone call. The Secret
Service is reported to have said
that they gave notice to the Sheriff about 1 hour after the
shooting, which would put the time of the shooting at approximately
4:40 p.m., 60-90 minutes before the entire hunting party's
recollection.
Hunting incident in
popular culture
The incident has been the subject of jokes, satire and public
ridicule.[32]
A number of these made reference to other controversies involving
Cheney.
- David
Letterman began his Monday show on February 13 with "Good news,
ladies and gentlemen, we have finally located weapons of
mass destruction.... It's Dick Cheney," and adding that "We
can't get bin
Laden, but we nailed a 78-year-old attorney."[33]
His Top 10
list was devoted to "Dick Cheney's excuses" and included "he
thought the guy was trying to go gay cowboy on me".
- Jay Leno also had a
piece on The Tonight Show in which he
pretended to host a game show with footage of George W. Bush and Pervez
Musharraf that was taken during Bush's visit to Pakistan. Towards the end of
that segment, the sound of loud bird calls were played, and Leno
asked Cheney to take care of the problem, with footage of the Vice
President shooting a gun then shown.
- Texas
Monthly won the 2007 Best Cover Line of the Year Award
from the Magazine Publishers of America for its January 2007 cover
mocking the Vice President (right).
- Jon Stewart
popularised the phrase "Cheney's Got a Gun" (a play on the 1989 Aerosmith song "Janie's Got a
Gun") on The Daily Show soon after the
event. Stewart and the Daily Show 's correspondents
repeatedly accentuated their disbelief of the absurdity of a
sitting vice president shooting a 78-year-old man in the face while
hunting quail which are raised in a pen and released mere seconds
before they are shot. Stewart, for instance, pointed out that
Whittington had been the first person to be shot by a sitting vice
president since Alexander Hamilton, and that while
Aaron Burr's fatal
shooting of Hamilton was during a duel over issues of honor and
political maneuvering; Whittington "was mistaken for a bird."
Correspondent Ed Helms,
reporting supposedly from Corpus Christi Hospital, said that
Whittington's condition had been upgraded from "stable" to "stable,
but still shot in the face by Dick Cheney." The show also used
graphics from the video game Duck Hunt. After Whittington's
post-discharge press conference, Stewart noted that Cheney's power
was such that upon shooting someone, the victim would
apologize.
- On his first show after the incident, Stephen
Colbert, host of The Colbert Report, confessed
to having been involved in a hunting accident of his own over the
weekend, then proceeded to show an edited version of Brit Hume's interview with
Dick Cheney, featuring Colbert in place of Cheney with far more
humorous responses to Hume's question. Colbert later mentioned the
hunting incident in his now
famous speech at the White House
Correspondents Dinner.
- The incident has been parodied twice in the comedy Family Guy:
- In the season 4 episode "Petergeist", Cheney shoots Peter at
point-blank range several times while hunting, and after says "I'm
sorry, I thought you were a deer"
- In the season 5 episode "Boys Do Cry", Cheney guards the president's
house with a shotgun, and while sleeping says "18% approval
ratings... I'll give you 18% of my foot in your ass" in reference
to the drop in approval ratings to 18% which followed the
shooting.
- In the Robot
Chicken episode "I'm Trapped," Cheney is captured by
terrorists in Afghanistan but escapes after stealing a
suit of armor (a parody of the movie Iron Man). The scene then changes
to a forest, where Cheney, still wearing the armor, shoots a hunter
in the face and declares, "Meh, thought he was a bird."
- During a Saturday Night Live skit, Kristen Wiig as Diane Sawyer mentions
the incident during a mock interview regarding Cheney's
accomplishments as vice president in which he denies feeling any
regrets for the situation.
- In his stand-up show The Fifth Annual End of the World
Tour, Christopher Titus observes that
"...[the] president is in
bad shape if the only way to take attention off of him is have the
vice president shoot a buddy in the face."
- In Will Ferrell's You're Welcome America: A Final Night
with George W. Bush, Ferrell (as Bush) describes Cheney as "a
guy so charismatic he could shoot a man in the face with a
shotgun...and then have that guy apologize to him."
- President Obama also joked about this subject. In his speech
for the White House Correspondents' Association Dinner on May 9,
2009, he said Mr Cheney was 'very busy working on his memoirs,
tentatively titled, How to Shoot Friends and Interrogate
People.' (http://edition.cnn.com/2009/POLITICS/05/10/obama.correspondents.dinner.jokes/#cnnSTCVideo)
Political use of the
incident
- On July 12, 2006, Russian president Vladimir Putin used the incident to
reject Cheney's criticism of human rights violations in Russia,
calling the criticism "a failed hunting shot".[34]
- Florida Governor Jeb
Bush said when he received a bright orange Farm Bureau sticker:
"I'm a little concerned that Dick Cheney is going to walk in."[35]
- United States Senator Patrick J. Leahy
(D-Vt.), who was once the target of Cheney's obscenity on the floor
of the Senate, said: "In retrospect, it looks like I got off
easy."[36]
- Before the news on Whittington's heart attack became known on
February 14, White House Press Secretary
Scott
McClellan was referring to President Bush's meeting with the
University of Texas championship football team when he said "The
orange that they're wearing is not because they're concerned that
the vice president may be there." However he pointed to his own
orange-striped tie and added that "Although that's why I'm wearing
it."[36][37]
- According to polls on February 27, 2006, two weeks after the
accident, Dick Cheney's approval rating dropped to 18%.[38]
- The Democratic Party
included the anniversary of this day in their 2007 Calendar for the
House of
Representatives. The item reads simply, "Cheney hunting
accident (2006)."[39]
External
links
References
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"Texas Cops Release Cheney
Shooting Report," The Smoking Gun
- ^ a
b
Texas Parks and Wildlife
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posted in The
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- ^ a
b
"Hunter shot by Cheney has
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- ^
"Harry Whittington's hospital statement". MSNBC.
2006-02-17. http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/11409731.
- ^
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- ^
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- ^
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- ^
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- ^
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- ^ "Victim Suffers Heart
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- ^
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- ^
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- ^
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- ^
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- ^
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- ^
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- ^
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- ^
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- ^
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- ^
"Local Quail Hunter Weighs In
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- ^
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- ^
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- ^ "After Cheney's Shooting
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- ^ "Cheney in comics' sights
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- ^
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- ^ a
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- ^
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See also