Washington Post: Sirhan Sirhan, convicted of Robert F. Kennedy assassination, seeks parole with no opposition from prosecutors
Sirhan B. Sirhan, convicted of the 1968 assassination of Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, will face a California parole board for the 16th time Friday in a prison outside San Diego. But unlike the first 15 times, no prosecutor will stand to oppose the release of Sirhan, who is now 77.
Sirhan Sirhan et al. that are talking to each other: Sirhan Sirhan, third from left in blue, reaches to shake the hand of shooting victim Paul Schrade, second from right, at the end of a parole hearing in 2016, where Sirhan was denied parole for the 15th time.
Schrade believes Sirhan is innocent of the assassination of Robert F. Kennedy. Sirhan was arrested at the scene of Kennedy’s shooting in Los Angeles on June 5, 1968, convicted of first-degree murder and sentenced to death for the slaying of a U.S. senator who appeared headed for the Democratic presidential nomination.
The assassination, along with that of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. two months earlier, created a turning point in American history with the sudden elimination of the charismatic leaders of the American civil rights movement and the Democratic Party respectively.
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WNU Editor: With no opposition from prosecutors, it looks like he will be released this time.
Here is an easy prediction.
His parole is going to please no one who lived during that time.
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