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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Jerry Parr, Secret Service agent who helped save Reagan, dies at 85

President Ronald Reagan is  shoved into his limousine March 30, 1981, by Secret Service agent Jerry Parr, in raincoat to the right of Reagan, immediately after the president was shot by a would-be assassin.  Parr was credited with saving Reagan’s life. (Ron Edmonds / File Associated Press)
Gale Holland And Zack Nauth Los Angeles Times

Jerry Parr, the Secret Service agent who shoved President Ronald Reagan into the back of the presidential limousine and ordered the car to the hospital during the 1981 assassination attempt, died Friday at a hospice in Washington. He was 85.

The cause was congestive heart failure, said his wife, Carolyn.

Parr was chief of the Secret Service detail when John Hinckley Jr. fired six shots outside the Washington Hilton. One bullet ricocheted off the limousine and hit the president. Reagan recovered.

“Jerry Parr was one of my true heroes,” Nancy Reagan said in a statement Friday. “Without Jerry looking out for Ronnie on March 30, 1981, I would have certainly lost my best friend and roommate to an assassin’s bullet.”

Born Sept. 16, 1930, in Montgomery, Alabama, Parr grew up in Miami, where he watched Reagan as Lt. Brass Bancroft in the film “Code of the Secret Service.”

More than 40 years later, the actor became president and Parr was thrust briefly into the Hollywood-like role of American hero.

In a photograph taken an instant after Hinckley fired his 22-caliber handgun outside the hotel, Parr and Reagan are visible over the top of the presidential limousine.

As the president turns to look for his attacker, Parr gazes directly into the bulletproof limousine. Parr called this his “counter-instinctive behavior.”

“If you were running track, you would not turn and look at the starter,” he said. “The gunfire is the starter .. You don’t need to look over there.”

Parr ran his hands over Reagan’s body, but found no injury. Then he noticed bright red blood on Reagan’s lips, which his Secret Service medical training told him must have come from the president’s lungs. He told the driver to head for George Washington University Hospital.

Parr “was humble but strong, reserved but confident, and blessed with a great sense of humor,” Nancy Reagan said in her statement. “It is no wonder that he and my husband got along so well.”