John Hinckley, Jr. granted a full-time release

Lawrence Turner
3 min readAug 8, 2016

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Neil Bush told Denver reporters he had met Scott Hinckley at a surprise party at the Bush home January 23, 1981, approximately three weeks after the U.S. Department of Energy had begun what was termed a “routine audit” of the books of the Vanderbilt Energy Corp.

On March 30, three representatives of the U.S. Department of Energy told Scott Hinckley, Vanderbilt’s vice president of operations, that auditors had uncovered evidence of pricing violations on crude oil sold by the company from 1977 through 1980. The auditors announced that the federal government was considering a penalty of two million dollars. Scott Hinckley reportedly requested “several hours to come up with an explanation” of the serious overcharges. The meeting ended a little more than an hour before John Hinckley Jr. shot President Reagan.

Neil Bush, son of President Reagan’s vice president George H.W. Bush, was scheduled to have dinner on March 31, 1981, with Scott Hinckley the brother of John Hinckley.

The family of John Hinckley was acquainted with the family of George H.W. Bush having made large contributions to George H.W. Bush’s political campaign, the Houston Post reported on March 31, 1981, Tuesday, PM cycle.

The Houston Post reported in a copyright story, Scott Hinckley, brother of John W. Hinckley Jr., who allegedly shot Reagan, was to have dined tonight in Denver at the home of Neil Bush, one of the vice president’s sons. Neil Bush, who lives in Denver and works for Standard Oil Co. of Indiana, had invited Scott Hinckley, vice president of his father’s Denver-based firm, Vanderbilt Energy Corp. to his home for dinner.

In 1978, Neil Bush served as campaign manager for his brother, George W. Bush, the vice president’s oldest son, who made an unsuccessful bid for Congress. Neil lived in Lubbock throughout much of 1978, where John Hinckley lived from 1974 through 1980.

Even the official government line admitted that the Bush and Hinckley families “maintained social ties.”

The white wash investigation and trial of John Hinckley never asked any questions relating to the Bush/Hinckley family relationship.

According to press reports, at the time of the shooting John Hinckley was heavily dosing with Valium — a hypnotic benzodiazepine.

John Hinckley had stalked Senator Ted Kennedy and President Jimmy Carter. He devoured books on Sirhan Sirhan, Robert Kennedy’s assassin (suspected by many conspiracy researchers to have been hypnotically programmed), and Arthur Bremer, who shot George Wallace.

Theorists ask the inevitable questions: Was Hinckley a mind-controlled assassin, a Manchurian Candidate programmed to “terminate with extreme prejudice”?

They point to the CIA’s longtime obsession with mind control and the fact that during the 1980 presidential primaries, Bush — the former director of Central Intelligence — enjoyed the zealous support of Agency regulars, who preferred their former boss to Reagan.

For an antisocial pariah, John Hinckley sure got around.

John Hinckley flew to Nebraska in an attempt to contact a member of the American Nazi Party.

The day after his Nazi-seeking mission, Hinckley flew to Nashville to stalk Jimmy Carter, but was arrested at the airport when authorities discovered three handguns in his suitcase. After only five hours in custody, this unstable character — who had attempted to transport weapons across state lines and into a city soon to be visited by the president of the United States — was released.

The attempted assassination of United States President Ronald Reagan occurred on March 30, 1981, 69 days into his presidency. While leaving a speaking engagement at the Washington Hilton Hotel in Washington, D.C., President Reagan and three others were shot and wounded by John Hinckley Jr.

NBC correspondent Judy Woodruff said that at least one shot was fired from the hotel, above Reagan’s limousine. She later elaborated, saying a Secret Service agent had fired that shot from the hotel overhang.

The Shadow Government did not care for Ronald Reagan when he first ran for president.

Close associates claimed Ronald Reagan was never the same again after the assassination attempt.

George H.W. Bush controlled the “President” during most of Ronald Reagan’s term in office.

Neil Bush became a director of the Silverado Banking, Savings & Loan Association in 1985 that cost the tax payers $1.6 billion three years later.

A federal judge, Judge Paul L. Friedman, granted John Hinckley, Jr. a full-time release, to begin no sooner than August 5 2016, from St. Elizabeth’s Hospital in Washington, D.C., where he has been in psychiatric treatment since the shooting.

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Lawrence Turner

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