My Night During an Assassination

RFK ZSpinThe movie "Bobby" has deep personal meaning for me. I was at the Ambassador Hotel the night Robert Kennedy was assassinated.

Rewind to March 16, 1968. I was a senior at Cleveland High School in Los Angeles. Senator Robert Kennedy announced he would run for President. I loved politics back then and had never been more excited. I immediately found out which muckamucks were running the campaign in Southern California. I contacted them and made a convincing case that they should create a organization called High School Students for Kennedy and that I was the guy to run it. They agreed and installed a phone in my bedroom -- it was the bomb. I organized car washes, airplane washes, fake primaries at high schools which all the local media covered. But more than anything, I really believed passionately in Robert Kennedy, because he had electricity. No one could stir people's emotions like him.

On June 4th, I went to the Ambassador for the victory party. It wasn't certain that he'd win but it sure seemed like he would. It was an amazing night filled with hope. People felt like the country, which lost its way in Vietnam, could come back in a big way.

About an hour before Kennedy took the stage, I somehow went up a security elevator -- I don't remember if I was invited or not, but I ended up on the floor where Kennedy and company were watching results. I didn't see Kennedy, but I remember leaving and Ethel bumped into me as we both entered the elevator. She kissed two of her kids goodnight and then Rosie Grier appeared. Grier is the former football star/Kennedy stalwart who one hour later would subdue Kennedy's assassin.



We all rode down together and victory was in the air. It was exhilarating.

I can't describe the events that followed. How could someone that vibrant and important be standing at a podium one second and dying in a pantry the next? It was too much for a high school student to process. I do remember a feeling I've never had before or since. I think I was capable of killing Sirhan Sirhan that night; at least I would have tried.

The events changed my life. I never connected with politics that way again. But it changed someone else's life more. That fall, I became a freshman at the University of California at Santa Barbara. There was a girl in my poli sci class who was also a big Kennedy supporter. She was also at the Ambassador that night. She wore a polka dot dress. When Kennedy was shot, she ran out of the ballroom and for weeks there were press reports that "the girl in the polka dot dress" may have been an accomplice to the assassination.

She was profoundly affected by assassination and her own drama. Sometime in the mid 70's, I heard she had taken her life. Too much to bear. So sad.

Reader Comments

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16. "too much to bear"...too much of a burden.

"too much to bare"...too much to make naked.

Posted at 6:25PM on Nov 20th 2006 by nitpicker

17. The whole Kennedy family are a bunch of crooks. The old man made his fortune running liquor during prohibition. JFK won the election by collaborating with the mob, in which he and his brother were killed later because they screwed them. The liberal media makes the family into some kind of great Americans, what a f***ing joke. JFK and Bobby were womanizers and liars, I have no respect for them or there whole criminal family and pity the fools that worship them as Gods!

Posted at 11:26AM on Nov 17th 2006 by Billy Ray

18. HAHAHAHHAH @ HARVEY

you little jew. you were collecting the pennies that fell out of their pockets.

get over yourself.

you will alawys be the loser standing outside of the peoples court.

Posted at 11:34AM on Nov 17th 2006 by Lou

19. He would stop the killing in vietnam..Get rid of the old boy corruption..?? he was a part of it...His brother and him started Vietnam...with Johnson making it worse...etc .He was as much a "OLD BOY" as they come...

Posted at 11:37AM on Nov 17th 2006 by flippy

20. Thanks Harvey, and thanks to those who appreciate and understand who Bobby became in the couple years before his death.

I am a 28 year old attorney who learned about RFK in a History of Civil Rights Law class. Before that class, I had assumed he was just another Kennedy. Little did I know....
The documentary "Assassinated" literally changed my life.... I recommend it to any one with an interest in MLK Jr., RFK, or the civil rights struggle.

I can't wait to see "Bobby".... thanks again, Harvey, thanks Mr. Estevez, and thanks to all posters on this thread for sharing your thoughts!!!

Posted at 11:39AM on Nov 17th 2006 by robyn

21. Harvey,
What a story you have. That is such a part of this country's history and you were there. I'm also Cleveland alumni, it sounds like you made it a great time to be on campus. Thanks for your story.

Posted at 11:42AM on Nov 17th 2006 by RP

22. I agree -why did everyone love the Kennedys? They are morally corrupt and criminals.

Posted at 1:14PM on Nov 17th 2006 by woj

23. I too remember this tragic event as if it were yesterday. I also remember JFK's very clearly.

Harvey- YOU WENT CLEVELAND???? Me too!!! Go Cavaliers!

Posted at 11:53AM on Nov 17th 2006 by Seattleite

24. Harvey, while this is an interesting story I find it strange that you are waxing poetic on the same forum that has hourly bashings of K-Fed. Perhaps another outlet might have been more appropriate.

Posted at 11:52AM on Nov 17th 2006 by Jim

25. Yesterday it was your close encounter with OJ, now, you were there at RFK 's assassination. What are you going to write on Monday? I know, I happened to attend the theatre the night President Lincoln was assassinated, give us a f***ing break. Harvey, you are a self absorbed bullsh*tter, and so are your pathetic followers, LOL!!!

Posted at 11:53AM on Nov 17th 2006 by Bullsh*t

26. #20 - My thoughts exactly. If you have such "poignant" memories what the hell are you doing on a celebrity gossip website? Go write a book, oh, I know the publishers don't believe your crap either.

Posted at 12:01PM on Nov 17th 2006 by nosyneighbor

27. This has to be one of the best columns you've ever written. Amid all of the "fluff" journalism, I honestly didn't know you could write stuff like this. It's a nice change.

Posted at 12:08PM on Nov 17th 2006 by TGIF

28. Great piece. I was pulled into the time period, I pulled into the whole auora. Then....the bomb? Harvey, that is a horrible slang term that wasnt even apart of that era. That line pulled me back to reality and only because of the topic my heart was still pained over the situation. Good Writing ..... I just dont know about the bomb.

Hope you have a good holiday season.

Posted at 12:51PM on Nov 17th 2006 by Katherine

29. Agree with #7, Harvey -- you have the clas and the chops. Thank you for your insights regarding this tragedy and the O.J. fiasco. You were a witness to nightmares that shape America to this day. You are a true journalist, not a "blogger". God bless you.

Posted at 12:18PM on Nov 17th 2006 by Amy

30. Hey # 12 billy ray , pretty much right of the kennedy brothers and their PR machine . You left out a few things . The boys helped to ice Marilyn . They , the fbi , the mob and the cia were all listening to her phone calls . They are all guilty from the Mob/cia hit ordered most probably by "Mr." President , John . The little black book was just too dangerous . Bastard Scum . Don't forget how the spin of spinmasters turned the Cuban missile crisis into a big win for us . What a F*k up ! we nearly got into a missile war over that sh*t . Could have been avoided . And don't forget how kennedy escaleted the Vietnam war , pay attention Iraq exit planners . My Mother who loved their looks but hated their secret lives cried when he died but also shouted at the TV " That what you get for killing Marilyn " -- karma has a hell of a way to get back at you .

Posted at 12:23PM on Nov 17th 2006 by Nasty Boil

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