John Hinckley Jr., who shot President Reagan, says he supports gun control measures
The man who shot President Ronald Reagan in the early 1980s says he supports stricter gun control measures — including keeping firearms out of the hands of people with mental health problems.
John Hinckley Jr. — who was released from court oversight last month – believes there are “too many guns in America,” he told ABC’s “Nightline” in an interview that aired Tuesday night.
“I certainly don’t think the mentally ill should have access to guns, I mean that’s kind of obvious,’ Hinckley, 67, told reporter Juju Chang.
“Background checks are good, and waiting periods are good,” he went on.
Hinckley, who spent decades in a Washington DC mental hospital and in a Virginia community under court supervision, lamented the current “climate” of the country following a spate of mass shootings in America.
“The climate of the country right now is not good. It’s not good to have so many guns,” he said.
The would-be presidential assassin was responding to a question from Chang about the Brady Law, named after former White House Press Secretary James Brady, who Hinckley gravely wounded in the 1981 shooting.
The law, passed by Congress in 1993, imposed a waiting period and increased background checks for people seeking to buy some guns in the US.
“Coming from you, that’s quite a statement,” Chang told Hinckley, after the latter signaled his support for increased gun control.
“Well, I hope it is because that’s the way I feel,” he responded.
Hinckley was 25 years old when he opened fire at Reagan with a rifle outside of the Washington Hilton Hotel on March 30, 1981.
He was apparently driven by a fantasy to impress the actress Jodie Foster, who at the time was a rising teenage movie star.
Hinckley was committed to St. Elizabeth’s Hospital in the nation’s capital after he was found not guilty by reason of insanity in 1982.
Since 2016, he was granted the ability to live with his mother in her gated community in Virginia with some court-ordered restrictions.
On June 15, US District Court Judge Paul L. Friedman ordered Hinckley freed from his remaining court-ordered restrictions if he remained mentally stable.