(The first quote above is from an
op/ed piece that was published by the Charlotte Observer in response to
the Cheney shooting incident. The second is from the website of the
"Riverview Plantation," a private hunting reserve in Georgia
that "Specializ[es] in Quail Hunting for the Corporate Account." In
other words, it is a place not unlike the Armstrong Ranch in south
Texas. While the above quote reads very much like a commentary on the
Cheney shooting, and a condemnation of Cheney's stated actions, it
actually is not. In an attempt to prompt some direct commentary on the
incident, I sent an e-mail inquiry to the owners of the plantation. I'm
still waiting for a response. I forgot to ask them, by the way, if they
would consider hunting with Dick Cheney to be a good "spectator sport.")
One of the most amazing things about
this case is that even if we accept without question the tale told by
Cheney and Armstrong - if we accept that this 'accident' occurred
exactly as we have been told it happened - it is perfectly obvious that the
consensus media opinion that there was no misconduct or negligence is
simply untrue. By his own
account, Cheney was
hunting by vehicle, a decidedly unsafe, and unethical, practice. By his own account, he was out in a
three-man hunting party. By his own
account, he
made no effort to ascertain the whereabouts of anyone else in his party
before firing away. By his own
account, he was firing at a bird that would have had to have
been flying ridiculously low. By his
own account, he swung his gun far
beyond "the mid-point" to take his shot. By his own account, he had
been drinking that day (undoubtedly far more than he has admitted to).
By his own account, he was
hunting in flat terrain with a party that
included a hostess, two other hunters, several guides and outriders
(scouts on horseback), a
medical team, and a Secret Service team -- and yet he
swung his gun around blindly a full 180º to take a shot at an
alleged bird that was
supposedly flying just a few feet off the ground.
By his own account, Cheney actions were, without question, criminally
reckless. And yet, remarkably enough, the media machine has
beat a hasty retreat from
this story, implying that there is really nothing left to talk about.
But let's assume, for the sake of
argument, that Whittington really did venture off to fetch his own
kill. That would, alas, raise yet another problem with the official
story.
According
to the Cheney/Rove/Armstrong version of events, Cheney was unaware of
Whittington's
position because Harry had been approaching Dick (shouldn't there be a
Tom in this story?) from behind,
unannounced. Leaving aside the fact that it would have clearly been
Cheney's responsibility to know Whittington's position prior to taking
his shot, since even a novice hunter knows that you
never, ever pull
the trigger without knowing exactly what is in your line of fire, there
is an obvious problem with this scenario. This was not, you see, your
run-of-the-mill hunting
party; this was a hunting
party
that included Dick Cheney, Vice President of the United States and
possibly the
most well-guarded man on the planet.
Though only
the
World
Socialist Web Site seems to have noticed, it is simply
inconceivable that someone
with a
loaded shotgun could walk up behind the Vice President without Cheney
and his
security personnel being aware of it. And if
Whittington was close enough to catch a full load of birdshot in his
chest and
face, then he was obviously close enough to deliver one as well, and
normally Cheney's army of security personnel keep tabs on such things.
The Charlotte Observer, alone among
the media, took note of yet another troubling aspect of the official
story:
"Cheney
shot Whittington at 5:15 p.m. on Saturday [5:30 p.m.,
according to official reports] -- way too late to be hunting quail.
Good hunters hunt early in the day, when the light is good, the birds
are active, and the dogs are fresh. One should generally not be out for
quail this late in the day." (Scott Denham "Cheney Ignored Safe Hunting
Procedures," Charlotte Observer, February 14, 2006)

Yet
another curious fact: this incident occurred very late in the
hunting season, and as
any
hunter knows, locating and flushing coveys of birds becomes
progressively more
difficult as the season wears on, as the population of birds is reduced
and the remaining quail become
savvy to the ways of the hunters pursuing them. Flushing two coveys in
rapid succession so late in the season, and so late in the
afternoon, would be extremely unlikely, and yet that is
exactly what the official story claims to be the case.
The preceding paragraph, it should be noted, would not apply if
Cheney's party
was shooting at pen-raised quail on a controlled-release 'hunt,' as he
has done in the past. But Cheney claimed otherwise during his chat with
Hume, stressing that they had been hunting "wild quail." Of course,
that could be just another of Dick Cheney's numerous lies, one he
constructed so as to avoid
the same sort of mild criticism he has received in the past for his
participation in
what amount to turkey shoots.
Here's yet another curious fact: according to all reports, Whittington
was purportedly wearing
hunting gear at the time of the shooting. But it's difficult to believe
that he actually was. According to Cheney, Whittington "was wearing
hunting glasses, and
that protected his eyes." But during Whittington's brief media
appearance, it certainly appeared as though his right eye had sustained
damage from the shot. Reports also hold that Whittington was wearing
a blaze orange hunting vest over three layers of street clothes. But it
is difficult to believe that #7½ birdshot fired from a 28-gauge
gun could penetrate four layers of clothing and still plow through a
considerable amount of skin, muscle and various other bodily tissues,
even from a much shorter distance than 30 yards.
It should be noted here that, as shotguns go, a 28-gauge gun is not a
particularly powerful weapon. The most popular shotgun sizes, in
descending order of
magnitude, are 10-gauge, 12-gauge, 16-gauge, 20-gauge, 28-gauge, and
410-gauge. None of these guns - and particularly the smaller
caliber weapons, which are typically loaded with lightweight birdshot -
are designed for maximum penetration. The intent is not
to shred the bird, but to bring it down with a minimal amount of
damage to the meat. It is therefore extremely unlikely that a
weapon designed to barely penetrate the flesh of a bird could
propel birdshot through four layers of clothing and then through the
skin, muscle and bone of the human chest wall. It is even more unlikely
that
a piece of shot could 'migrate' through the chest wall and into the
heart muscle. A reasonable conclusion to draw then is that Whittington
was probably not
attired as reports would have us believe.
So what do
we have here? We have Harry
Whittington supposedly being shot while returning from performing a
duty that is entirely
incompatible with this aristocratic group’s hunting philosophy, we have
a shot pattern that is wholly incompatible with both the
alleged
shooting distance and the type of shot that was supposedly being taken
(a wing shot), we have a shooting angle that appears to
contradict the notion
that Cheney
was shooting at a bird, we have a hunting party having phenomenal luck
despite being out late in the day and late in the season, and we have a
shooting victim who was likely attired in some manner other than what
has been
reported.
Most of the
questions surrounding the
shooting would have been answered had a routine
investigation taken
place. We would know, for example, the exact distance between shooter
and
victim. Had the gun and ammunition been taken into custody, ballistics
tests could have been performed that could pinpoint that distance
through
comparisons of test patterns with the actual shot pattern imprinted on
Whittington’s torso. And we know that taking such actions is standard
procedure -- and we know that
because the
Hunting Accident Report Form advises officers quite explicitly on how
to
proceed with a hunting incident investigation:
If
possible, firearms, archery tackle,
ammunition/powder or other equipment involved in a hunting
accident/incident
should be taken into the custody of the investigating officer for
testing
and/or evaluation.


Needless
to say, that did not happen,
so we do not know the precise distance from which the
shot was
fired. We know that “Whittington was hit with as many as 200 birdshot
pellets.” (Nedra
Pickler "Experts:
Cheney Violated Cardinal Rule of Hunting," Charlotte Observer, February
14, 2006) Doctors who tended to Whittington steadfastly avoided
discussing
the number of pellet wounds, though they did ultimately offer a
ludicrously vague
estimate of "between 5 and 200," leading many to conclude that the
actual number was far closer to 200 than to 5.
We also know that a 28-gauge shell loaded with the size birdshot that
Cheney was
using “would normally contain about 260 pellets.” (Ian Urbina "Cheney
Account Questioned," International
Herald Tribune, February 16, 2006) And we
know,
from the diagram included in the Accident Report, that roughly 200
of those birdshot
pellets were tightly clustered within a fairly small, roughly circular
area -- with one portion of the circle missing, from which we can
deduce that the 25% or so of the pellets that missed
their
target
likely passed over Whittington’s right shoulder (though the
illustration in the accident report erroneously shows the injuries on
his left side).
We
also know, from this photo and others, that Cheney appears to favor a
shotgun
with a fairly short barrel -- and likely with an open choke as well
(the more
open the choke, the larger the diameter at the end of the barrel). And
we know that the shorter the
barrel, and the more open the choke, the more quickly the shot will
scatter after exiting the barrel.
From all this we reach the inescapable conclusion that the shot that
hit Harry Whittington was fired from considerably less
than 30 yards. We cannot pinpoint the exact distance, but we know that
it
wasn't even close to the official claim. Alex Jones (who is not one of
my preferred sources of information) has conducted a test
that he claims proves the shot
was fired from 15-18 feet away. Such a claim, however, overstates the
conclusions that can be drawn from his test. Ideally,
the test should utilize the very same gun and ammunition that Cheney
was using -- or at
least the exact same make and model of weapon, outfitted with a barrel
of the same length and choke, and loaded with ammunition from the same
manufacturer
and with the same load and shot characteristics. Also, photographic or
other evidence of the true extent of Whittington's wounds is required
so that the shot pattern that the test is trying to match can first be
ascertained.
Despite the problems with the test (and in fairness to Jones, there is
obviously no
way that he could have satisfied the second condition, since no such
evidence has been, or ever will be, released), it does illustrate,
rather
convincingly, that it is inconceivable that any
28-gauge shotgun firing #7½ birdshot from anywhere
near 30 yards away could have caused Harry
Whittington's wounds. Both the
concentration of pellets, and the depth of penetration, testify to the
fact that the shot was fired from a much shorter distance.
Another hard and fast conclusion we can draw from the available
evidence is
that, contrary to media reports and White House spin, hunting
‘accidents’ of
this nature are virtually unheard of. According to the graphic to
the right (provided by
Time
Magazine), there were only 850 hunting accidents throughout the
country in 2002, and only 26 of those - a mere
3% - involved quail hunters. So we know that quail hunting accidents,
in general, are quite rare. And this was no run-of-the-mill quail
hunting accident. The Charlotte Observer has claimed
that “hunting accidents like Cheney’s happened 34 times last year” in
the state
of Wisconsin. (Robert Imrie “Hunting Accidents Like Cheney’s Happened
34
Times Last Year," Charlotte Observer, February13, 2006)
The title of the
Observer article, however, is very misleading, for the truth is that it
is extremely
unlikely that there were
any
hunting accidents "like
Cheney's" last year in Wisconsin -- or in any of the other 49 states.
Of the three
representative examples of "accidents like Cheney's" cited by the
Observer, none bears the slightest resemblance to Cheney's incident.
James
Manzke, for example, was hit in the hand with “one pellet that traveled
3 inches into
the
meaty part of his hand,” while Gregory Horton “was wounded in the hand,
arm,
nose and
head from eight 12-gauge shotgun pellets while pheasant hunting,” and
Joe
Crosby “struck his father in the head, neck, chest and shoulder” with
15
pellets.
These are
the types of accidents that,
while statistically not nearly as common as the White House spin team
would have us
believe,
could reasonably be expected to occur from time to time.
But there is,
alas, an enormous
difference between getting sprayed with a few pieces of
stray shot, and getting blasted in the face and chest from short range
with
nearly a
full
load of shot. That type of 'accident,' we can safely conclude,
is an
exceptionally rare event,
enough so that should such an ‘accident’ occur, it would, under
virtually any
other
conceivable circumstances, certainly be looked upon by law enforcement
officials as
a probable crime.


In
this
case, however, authorities didn’t
even bother to pretend that they had any intention of investigating the
incident,
as a quick read through the two-page Texas
Parks and Wildlife Report readily reveals. Instructions to
investigating officers
included right
on the
form were willfully ignored. The weapon and ammunition, as
previously
noted,
were not seized for examination and testing. A recommendation that “a
copy of local law
enforcement/hospital report” be attached to the form was likewise
ignored. Other
attachments are curiously absent as well, including a “Shooter’s
Statement,” “a
“Victim’s Statement,” and “Witness’ Statements.” Instead, all we find
is
a very
brief summary of the incident that is simply a rote repetition of the
official cover story. That story was supplied by the one and only
witness listed
on the form - Katharine Armstrong of Armstrong, Texas.
The shooter,
Richard B. Cheney, was obviously
a witness to the event as well, but it appears quite likely that he was
not actually
interviewed. In
the brief section of the report reserved for information about the
shooter,
“Years hunting
experience” is left blank and “Hunter Education Certified?” is marked
“Unknown,”
although such mundane information could have been quickly and easily
gathered had the shooter actually been even briefly questioned.
The Kenedy County Sheriff's Department also made no effort to actually
investigate the shooting. And the department seemed to have a little
trouble
keeping its story straight initially, offering varying versions of
the initial law enforcement response to the shooting. Sheriff Ramon
Salinas III first told the New York Times that his deputy had
questioned Cheney Saturday night, not long after the shooting. But
other reports held that a deputy responding to reports of the shooting
had in fact been turned away at the gates of the property (I wasn't
even aware that I
apparently have the option of turning away investigating officers
should a shooting ever occur on my property. Is
the LAPD aware of this?)
Secret Service agents later claimed that they had promptly notified the
sheriff of the shooting, and had, at that time, arranged an interview
with Cheney for
Sunday morning. Salinas then quickly changed his story and claimed that
he
had made the decision not to send a deputy on Saturday night. But on
February 14, the Washington Post reported the following: "Secret
Service spokesman Eric Zahren said
at
least one deputy was turned away shortly after the shooting
because security personnel at the ranch were not aware of the agreement
between the sheriff and the Secret Service." That statement, it should
be noted,
was more than a little bizarre, given that the turning away of law
enforcement
personnel only makes sense if the "security personnel"
were aware of the supposed
agreement and had relayed that information to the investigating officer.
(
http://mediamatters.org/items/printable/200602150014)
The next day, Zahren added a few more modifications to the story,
telling the New York
Times that "some local police officers had heard about the shooting on
a scanner when an ambulance was sent to pick up Mr. Whittington. They
showed up at the ranch unsolicited. Private guards, not Secret Service
agents, Mr. Zahren said, turned the police away because they did not
know anything had occurred." So now it was private security guards
turning away police officers, rather than Secret Service agents turning
away sheriff's deputies, with the added caveat that the officers
learned of the shooting independently when an ambulance was dispatched.
That's a nice
story, I suppose, except
for the fact that Cheney has claimed that the hunting party didn't need
to
call an ambulance, since they already "had an ambulance at the ranch,
because one follows me around wherever I go." And then, of course,
there is the decidedly dubious claim that real cops would defer to
the authority of rent-a-cops.
Sheriff Salinas' final report on the incident, issued on February 15,
offered yet another version of events:
On February 11, 2006 at approximately
5:30 p.m., I, Ramon Salinas, III, and Sheriff of Kenedy County received
a telephone call at my home from Captain Charles Kirk in reference to a
possible hunting accident that had occurred at the Armstrong Ranch.
Captain Kirk stated that he was on his way to the Armstrong gate to get
more information.
About 8 to 10 minutes later, I received another call from a United
States Secret Service Agent; I believe his name was Martinez. He said
the purpose of the call was to officially notify the Kenedy County
Sheriff's Office of a hunting accident that had just occurred on the
Armstrong Ranch and that it involved Vice-President Cheney.
After I hung up, Captain Kirk called me back and said that he'd made
contact with a Border Patrol agent at the Armstrong gate and that the
Agent told him that he didn't know anything about the accident. I then
told Captain Kirk that it was fine and that I would contact someone on
the Ranch.
After speaking with Captain Kirk I contacted Constable Ramiro Medellin
Jr., former Sheriff of Kenedy County and asked him if he had any
information about the accident. Constable Medellin stated that he would
call me right back.
Constable Medellin returned my call and said, "This in fact is an
accident." He stated that he had spoken with some of the people in the
hunting party who were eyewitnesses and that they all said it was
definitely a hunting accident. I also spoke with another eyewitness
and he said the same thing, that it was an accident.
After hearing the same information from eyewitnesses and Constable
Medellin, it was at this time that I decided to send my Chief Deputy
first thing Sunday morning to interview the Vice-President and other
witnesses.
A few minutes later, I received another call from the Secret Service
asking if I was going to send someone to the Ranch. I told him that
someone would be there first thing in the morning. The Secret Service
said they would be at the gate waiting.
At approximately 6:15 p.m. I contacted Chief Deputy San Miguel and
advised him of the incident and to be at the gate at approximately 8:00
a.m.
(
http://www.caller2.com/2006/pdf/kcsr.pdf)
There is certainly no shortage of irregularities in the sheriff's
brief, poorly written
report. First of all, we now find that Salinas was first informed of
the
shooting - and I couldn't make this stuff up if I wanted to, folks - by
Captain Kirk. And the phone call from Kirk to Salinas came in at 5:30
p.m.,
which just happens to be the exact time that Whittington was shot,
according to all official accounts. So what happened was that
Whittington was shot, his wounds were tended to at the scene, an
ambulance was summoned (even though there was already one there), which
Captain Kirk picked up on via a scanner, after which he headed out
towards the ranch while phoning Salinas. And all of that happened, of
course, instantaneously, so that Salinas actually knew about the
shooting the very second that the shot was fired.
By 5:40 p.m., just ten minutes after the shot was fired, a Secret
Service agent had already contacted Salinas to again inform him of the
shooting, but Salinas didn't bother to note the agent's name, because
when someone calls to report a shooting involving the Vice-President of
the United States, it's not really important to make a note of who that
person is.
Immediately after that call, Captain Kirk called back to say that he
had arrived at the Armstrong gate, where he encountered not a Secret
Service agent, and not a private security officer, but rather a Border
Patrol agent, who was, I'm guessing, patrolling the borders of the
Armstrong Ranch. That agent did not, however, turn Captain Kirk away,
as previously reported. Instead, Kirk was called off by Sheriff
Salinas, who then called Constable Medellin to see if he just
happened
to have any information on a shooting that had taken place just minutes
before.
Constable Medellin then promptly called back to
confidently inform Salinas that "This in fact is an accident," even
though nobody that I've ever known actually talks like that, and even
though Constable Medellin couldn't
possibly have known the details of the shooting less than half an hour
after it had taken place. Nevertheless, he boldly claimed to have
spoken to multiple eyewitnesses, and Salinas added that he had also
spoken to an eyewitness, though none of these alleged witnesses are
named, undoubtedly because they don't actually exist.
By 6:15 p.m., just 45 minutes after the shot was fired - and while the
hunting party was still focused on tending to Whittington, according to
Cheney's account, and not yet concerned with notifying authorities or
the media - both the Sheriff and the Constable had spoken to multiple
witnesses and were satisfied that this was nothing more than a routine
hunting accident. And they had, remarkably enough, talked to all those
witnesses a full 45 minutes before the hunting party had even made it
back to the house! That, I have to say, is some pretty impressive
police work.
To be continued yet again ...