Juan Romero, the busboy who tried to help a wounded Robert F. Kennedy the night he was shot in Los Angeles, has died at age 68.
Romero was forever haunted by what happened just after midnight on June 5, 1968, when he was working at the Ambassador Hotel on Wilshire Boulevard near Koreatown. That was the night that Robert F. Kennedy, a candidate for president of the United States, was shot after he was declared the winner in the South Dakota and California presidential primaries in the 1968 election. Romero, who was 17 at the time, squatted next to the fallen president and held his cradled Kennedy’s head. Romero tried to help the candidate up before he realized how gravely wounded Kennedy was, reports The Los Angeles Times.
For decades, Romero tried to escape the memory of this moment, documented forever by photographers. He left Los Angeles and moved to Wyoming. He became a construction worker, settled in San Jose, Calif. and raised a family. The Los Angeles Times writes that he still spent years refusing to mark his birthday because it was the same month as RFK’s assassination. But in recent years, he had finally started to let go of the memory. Which is why his death seems all the more tragic.
“He had a heart attack several days ago and his brain went too long without oxygen,” said his longtime friend, TV newsman Rigo Chacon of San Jose according to The Los Angeles Times. “He passed away on Monday morning.”
Thanks for reading InsideHook. Sign up for our daily newsletter and be in the know.