Skip to Content, Navigation, or Footer.
Tuesday, Dec. 24
The Indiana Daily Student

world

Cheney speaks out for first time since shooting

VP accepts blame, defends withholding info

WASHINGTON -- Vice President Dick Cheney on Wednesday accepted full blame for shooting a fellow hunter and defended his decision to not publicly disclose the accident until the following day. He called it "one of the worst days of my life."\n"I'm the guy who pulled the trigger that fired the round that hit Harry," Cheney told Fox News Channel in his first public statement since the shooting Saturday in south Texas.\nCheney described seeing 78-year-old Harry Whittington fall to the ground after he pulled the trigger while aiming at a covey of quail.\n"The image of him falling is something I'll never ever be able to get out of my mind," Cheney said. "I fired, and there's Harry falling. It was, I'd have to say, one of the worst days of my life at that moment."\nCheney has been under intense political pressure to speak out about the shooting incident, which has become a public relations embarrassment and potential political liability for the White House. Until Wednesday, Cheney had refused to comment on why he withheld information about the shooting, which prolonged the controversy and made him the butt of jokes.\nCheney was soft-spoken and somber during the interview with Fox's Brit Hume.\n"You can talk about all of the other conditions that exist at the time but that's the bottom line and -- it was not Harry's fault," he said. "You can't blame anybody else. I'm the guy who pulled the trigger and shot my friend."\nCheney said he'd had a beer at lunch that day, but nobody was drinking when they went back out to hunt several hours later.\nTexas officials said the shooting was an accident, and no charges have been brought against the vice president.\nA report that the Texas Parks and Wildlife Department issued Monday said Whittington was retrieving a downed bird and stepped out of the hunting line he was sharing with Cheney.\n"Another covey was flushed and Cheney swung on a bird and fired, striking Whittington in the face, neck and chest at approximately 30 yards," the report said.\n"I ran over to him," Cheney said. "He was lying there on his back, obviously, bleeding. You could see where the shot struck him."\nHe said he has no idea if he hit a bird because he was focused on Whittington.\n"I said, 'Harry, I had no idea you were there.' He didn't respond," Cheney said.\nWhittington was reportedly doing well at a Texas hospital Wednesday, a day after doctors said a pellet entered his heart and he had what they called "a mild heart attack."\nHospital officials said the Texan, though still listed in intensive care, had a normal heart rhythm again Wednesday afternoon and was sitting up in a chair, eating and planning to do some legal work in his room.\nCheney has been roundly criticized for failing to tell the public about the accident until the next day. He said he thought it made sense to let the owner of the ranch where it happened reveal the accident on the local newspaper's Web site Sunday morning.\n"I thought that was the right call," Cheney said. "I still do."\nCheney said he thought that ranch owner Katharine Armstrong should make the story public, because she was an eyewitness who had grown up on the ranch and is "an acknowledged expert in all of this" as a past head of the Texas Parks and Wildlife Department. He also agreed with her decision to choose the local newspaper as the way to get the news out.\n"I thought that made good sense because you can get as accurate a story as possible from somebody who knew and understood hunting and then it would immediately go up to the wires and be posted on the Web site, which is the way it went out and I thought that was the right call," Cheney said.\nIn response to a question if he still thought it was the right decision, Cheney said, "The accuracy was enormously important, I had no press person with me."\nArmstrong told reporters that Whittington made a mistake by not announcing himself as he returned to the hunting line after breaking off to retrieve a downed bird. But Cheney, an avid and longtime hunter, said Whittington was not to blame.\nLynn Brezosky contributed to this report from Corpus Christi.

Get stories like this in your inbox
Subscribe