Assassination of Robert F. Kennedy | |
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Location | Ambassador Hotel, Los Angeles, California, U.S. |
Coordinates | 34°03′35″N 118°17′50″W / 34.0597°N 118.2971°W |
Date | June 5, 1968 12:15 a.m. (UTC−7) |
Target | Robert F. Kennedy |
Attack type | Political assassination, mass shooting |
Weapons | Iver Johnson .22 LR revolver |
Deaths | 1 (Kennedy died on June 6, 1968, from his injuries) |
Injured | 5[a] |
Perpetrator | Sirhan Sirhan |
Verdict | Guilty on all counts |
Convictions | First-degree murder, assault with a deadly weapon with intent to commit murder (5 counts)[2] |
Sentence | Death in 1969; commuted in 1972 to life imprisonment with the possibility of parole |
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Personal U.S. Attorney General U.S. Senator from New York Presidential campaign Assassination and legacy |
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On June 5, 1968, Robert F. Kennedy was shot by Sirhan Sirhan at the Ambassador Hotel in Los Angeles, California, and pronounced dead the following day.
Kennedy, a United States senator and candidate in the 1968 Democratic Party presidential primaries, won the California and South Dakota primaries on June 4. He addressed his campaign supporters in the Ambassador Hotel's Embassy Ballroom. After leaving the podium, and exiting through a kitchen hallway, he was mortally wounded by multiple shots fired by Sirhan. Kennedy died at Good Samaritan Hospital nearly 25 hours later. His body was buried at Arlington National Cemetery.
Sirhan, a Palestinian who held strong anti-Zionist and pro-Palestinian beliefs, testified in 1969 that he killed Kennedy "with 20 years of malice aforethought"; he was convicted and sentenced to death. Due to People v. Anderson, his sentence was commuted to life in prison in 1972 with a possibility of parole. His parole request has been denied numerous times. Kennedy's assassination prompted the Secret Service to protect presidential candidates. Additionally, it led to several conspiracy theories.
The assassination was one of four major assassinations of the 1960s in the United States, coming several years after the assassination of Kennedy's brother John in 1963 and the assassination of Malcolm X in 1965, and two months after the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr. in 1968.
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