On March 21, 1981, Reagan and his wife,
Nancy, visited
Ford's Theatre in Washington, D.C., for a fundraising event. In his autobiography
An American Life, Reagan recalled,
Speaking engagement at the Washington Hilton Hotel On March 28, Hinckley arrived in Washington, D.C., by bus and checked into the Park Central Hotel. Hinckley knew that he might be killed during the assassination attempt, and he wrote but did not mail a letter to Foster about two hours prior to his attempt on the president's life. In the letter, he said that he hoped to impress her with the magnitude of his action and that he would "abandon the idea of getting Reagan in a second if I could only win your heart and live out the rest of my life with you." On March 30, Reagan delivered a luncheon address to
AFL–CIO representatives at the
Washington Hilton. The Secret Service was very familiar with the hotel, having inspected it more than 100 times for presidential visits since the early 1970s. The Hilton was considered the safest venue in Washington because of its secure, enclosed passageway called "President's Walk", built after the 1963
assassination of John F. Kennedy. Reagan entered the building through the passageway at about 1:45 p.m., waving to a crowd of news media and citizens. The Secret Service had required him to wear a
bulletproof vest for some events, but Reagan was not wearing one for the speech, because his only public exposure would be the 30 feet (9 m) between the hotel and
his limousine, and the agency did not require vests for agents that day. No one saw Hinckley behaving in an unusual way. Witnesses who reported him as "fidgety" and "agitated" apparently confused Hinckley with another person that the Secret Service had been monitoring.
Shooting and the police officer
Thomas Delahanty during the assassination attempt of Reagan.
Secret Service Agent Robert Wanko can be seen unfolding the stock of an
Uzi in case of further attack. revolver and the armored-glass limousine window that was struck by Hinckley's fifth shot. On display at the US Secret Service's restricted-access museum, 2022. At 2:27 p.m., Reagan exited the hotel through "President's Walk" on
Florida Avenue, where reporters waited. He left the T Street NW exit toward his waiting limousine as Hinckley waited in the crowd. The Secret Service had extensively screened those attending the president's speech, but allowed an unscreened group to stand within of him, behind a
rope line. The agency uses multiple layers of protection. Local police in the outer layer briefly check people, Secret Service agents in the middle layer check for weapons and more agents form the inner layer immediately around the president. Hinckley had penetrated the first two layers. As several hundred people applauded Reagan, the president unexpectedly passed right in front of Hinckley. Reporters standing behind a rope barricade away asked questions. As Mike Putzel of the
Associated Press shouted "Mr. President—", Hinckley assumed a
crouch position and rapidly fired a
Röhm RG-14 .22 LR blue steel
revolver six times in 1.7 seconds, missing the president with all six shots. The first shot hit
White House press secretary James Brady in the head above his left eye, passing through underneath his brain and shattering his brain cavity. The bullet had a small explosive charge within it which exploded on impact.
District of Columbia police officer Thomas Delahanty recognized the sound as a gunshot and turned his head sharply to the left to identify the shooter. As he did so, he was struck in the back of his neck by the second shot, the bullet ricocheting off his spine. Delahanty fell on top of Brady, screaming "I am hit!" Hinckley now had a clear shot at the president, but Alfred Antenucci, a labor official from
Cleveland who was standing nearby, and saw Hinckley fire, struck him on the head, and began to wrestle him from behind. Upon hearing the shots, Special Agent in Charge
Jerry Parr almost instantly grabbed Reagan by the shoulders and dove with him toward the open rear door of the limousine. Agent Ray Shaddick trailed just behind Parr to assist in throwing both men into the car. The third round overshot the president, instead hitting the window of a building across the street. Parr's actions likely saved Reagan from being hit in the head. As Parr pushed Reagan into the limousine, Secret Service agent
Tim McCarthy snapped his attention toward the sound of the gunfire, pivoted to his right, and placed himself in the line of fire. McCarthy spread his arms and legs, taking a wide stance directly in front of Reagan and Parr to make himself a target. McCarthy was struck in the lower chest by the fourth round, the bullet traversing his right lung,
diaphragm and right lobe of the
liver. Dennis McCarthy later reported that he had to "strike two citizens" to force them to release Hinckley. Secret Service agent Robert Wanko deployed an
Uzi submachine gun concealed in a briefcase to cover the president's evacuation, and to deter a potential group attack. The day after the shooting, Hinckley's gun was given to the
ATF, which traced its origin. In just 16 minutes, agents found that the gun had been purchased at Rocky's Pawn Shop in
Dallas, Texas, on October 13, 1980. It had been loaded with six Devastator brand
cartridges, which contained small aluminum and
lead azide explosive charges designed to explode on contact, but the bullet that hit Brady was the only one that exploded. On April 2, after learning that the others could explode at any time, volunteer doctors wearing bulletproof vests removed the bullet from Delahanty's neck.
George Washington University Hospital After the Secret Service first announced "shots fired" over its radio network at 2:27 p.m., Reagan—
codename "Rawhide"—was removed from the scene by the agents in the limousine ("Stagecoach"). No one knew that Reagan had been shot. After Parr searched Reagan's body and found no blood, he stated that "Rawhide is OK...we're going to Crown" (the
White House), as he preferred its medical facilities to those of an unsecured hospital. Reagan was in great pain from the bullet that struck his rib, and believed that his rib had cracked when Parr pushed him into the limousine. When the agent checked him for gunshot wounds, Reagan coughed up bright, frothy blood. Although the president believed that he had cut his lip, Parr assessed that the cracked rib had punctured Reagan's lung and ordered the motorcade to divert to nearby
George Washington University Hospital, which the Secret Service periodically inspected for use. The limousine arrived there less than four minutes after leaving the hotel, while other agents took Hinckley to a jail, and Nancy Reagan ("Rainbow") left the White House for the hospital. Although Parr had requested a stretcher, none was ready at the hospital, which did not normally station a stretcher at the emergency department's entrance. Reagan exited the limousine and insisted on walking. He acted casually and smiled at onlookers as he entered the hospital. While he entered the hospital unassisted, once inside, Reagan complained of difficulty breathing, his knees buckled and he fell to one knee. Parr and others assisted him into the emergency department. The
physician to the president,
Daniel Ruge, had been near Reagan during the shooting and arrived in a separate car. Believing that the president might have experienced a heart attack, Ruge insisted that the hospital's trauma team operate on Reagan as they would any other patient. When a hospital employee asked Reagan's aide
Michael Deaver for the patient's name and address, only when Deaver stated "
1600 Pennsylvania" did the worker realize that the president was in the emergency department. The medical team, led by Joseph Giordano, cut Reagan's "thousand-dollar" custom-made suit in order to examine him. Reagan complained about the cost of the ruined suit, which was cited by an assistant in a press briefing to reassure the public that the president was in stable health. Military officers, including the one who carried the
nuclear football, unsuccessfully tried to prevent
Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) agents from confiscating the suit, Reagan's wallet and other possessions as evidence. The
Gold Codes card was in the wallet, and the FBI did not return it until two days later. The medical personnel found that Reagan's
systolic blood pressure was 60 compared to the normal 140, indicating that he was in
shock, and knew that most 70-year-olds in the president's condition would not survive. However, Reagan was in excellent physical health, and had been shot by a .22 ()-caliber bullet instead of a larger
.38 () as was first feared. They treated him with intravenous fluids, oxygen, tetanus toxoid and chest tubes While intubated, he scribbled to a nurse, "All in all, I'd rather be in Philadelphia", borrowing a line from
W. C. Fields. The chief of thoracic surgery, Benjamin L. Aaron, performed a
thoracotomy lasting 105 minutes because the bleeding persisted. Ultimately, Reagan lost over half of his blood volume in the emergency department and during surgery, Reagan's post-operative course was complicated by fever, which was treated with antibiotics. Because Reagan had entered the operating room conscious and not in shock, and the surgery was routine, his doctors and others predicted that he could leave the hospital in two weeks, return to work at the
Oval Office in a month and completely heal in six to eight weeks with no long-term effects. ==Immediate response==