Ira Attebury Shooting at 1979 Battle of Flowers Parade

Moderators: Elvis, DrVolin, Jeff

Ira Attebury Shooting at 1979 Battle of Flowers Parade

Postby elfismiles » Fri Aug 05, 2011 12:48 pm

elfismiles wrote:
I've never been confronted face to face by someone wielding a loaded firearm.

However, I was shot at (along with everybody else in attendance) by Ira Attebury, a PCP addicted war veteran who wanted to commit suicide-by-cop and killed several people, including people who had been sitting where my mother, cousin and I had been sitting before my mother decided we'd get sun-burned there.

viewtopic.php?p=336089#p336089



-=-=-=-=-

I am a survivor of this 1979 shooting spree...

Battle of Flowers Parade
http://www.battleofflowers.org/battle-o ... arade.aspx

In 1979, the parade did not take place on the advice of the police because of a tragic incident that occurred 30 minutes before it was to begin.

http://www.battleofflowers.org/about-us/history.aspx



April 26 in San Antonio history…
Apr 26 - Posted by sapltexana
...
Image
1979: Ira Attebury sprays crowd with shotgun and semiautomatic rifle fire from parked motorhome during Battle of Flowers parade (right). Two die, 55 are wounded. Attebury commits suicide as SWAT teams close in.

http://mysapl.wordpress.com/2010/04/26/ ... history-2/



Image


SMiles EHE AutoBio Danger: Parade

(The following is a short description of this experience. I wrote this for my freshman high school english class.)

As we rounded the corner, running as fast as we could, tear gas grenades had just started to fall. I then thought to my self, "How could a day this perfect have so much death and blood-shed?"

It was a beautiful day, warm and sunny. My mother, my cousin, and I were going to the "Battalla de Flowers" [sic?] parade in San Antonio.

While my mother was looking for a place to sit, I carried the folding chairs. My cousin Lisa and I saw a place to sit. There was a spot in front of a small blue trailer with the freeway up and behind it. It looked like a great place to sit to us, but my mother of course disagreed. She said, "No, we'll get sun burned!" So we ended up getting a place on the other side of the street with a used car place in back of us. Other people quickly took the place on the other side of the street which my mother had rejected. I distinctly remember where we were sitting. Behind us people were sitting on the hoods of the used cars. Above them an advertising balloon was floating.

Soon the parade started, and we could here the deep sound of the beating drums in the background, coming closer. When they finally reached us I saw beautiful floats, women in long flowing dresses, and Academy people twirling fake guns. Then it started!

At first everyone thought that the sounds were fireworks or kids playing with firecrackers. We were wrong! We knew something was wrong when people everywhere started falling. Their limp bodies hitting the ground like beef on a butcher table. The next thing I knew I was on the ground. At first I thought I had been shot. My mother had pushed me and my cousin on the ground and was laying on my back. She then pulled the chairs on top of us. The people to the left of us had been hit but we found out later that their blue-jeans had stopped the bullets from doing worse damage than they did (Thank God for Calvin Klein). The people whom we were facing, while lyeing on our stomaches, were also hit. When they were hit blood was falling right in front of my face. We were lyeing there for an eternity it seemed when someone finally did something. A man who was in back of us jumped up and told us what to do. He said, "He's gotten the cops! There's no one who can help us!" Panic stricken, everyone, including us, started to run, following his lead. As we were running all I could see were silver objects with smoke belching forth.

As we rounded the corner we saw a woman in a long white old car. She gestured to us to come to her. She then asked what was going on. We told her some maniac was shooting people. She then asked, "Well are they gonna finish the parade after they shoot him?" We just looked at her and then ran. We kept running till we finally came to our friend's house who was living close by.

We later found out that the sniper had a grocery cart full of guns and ammo for them. Seven people were killed and about fifty-two were injured. Four of the people killed were the people who were sitting where I had wanted to sit. In front of the "Blue Trailer." That's where he was, in the blue trailler.

Thank God for mother's intuition. If it weren't for her we'd all be dead!


http://www.elfis.net/elfol6/smlehe2a.htm




On the March 11th, 2008 episode of my PsiOp-Radio show I talked about the incident... starts at about the 48-50 minute mark.





History of Judson Rocket Football
by Giles Babb
...

Rocket Band in 1978 Battle of Flowers Parade: About a block up the street Ira Attebury would carry out his rampage the following year. Reportedly, he had camped out at the same location, at the corner of Broadway and Grayson (Burgraf Tire), for a couple of Fiesta Week Parades leading up to 1979, which is another way of saying he was probably just up the road on this day as well. It's rather grim to think that maybe we'd been marching past him all that time, especially near where we'd line up for the Parade to begin with. That next year (my first at TAMU), the rest of my family would be further up the way---and close enough to the carnage without being too close----where they got some rather stark photos of the San Antonio Police in action, and hundreds of vacant seats and abandoned purses, ice chests; etc.

http://www.judsonrocketball.com/rocket_band-2.html





Black Friday: Bullets instead of flowers
Posted on 04/13/2010 by gdelaune

Time passes faster than a lightning flash. It doesn’t seem like it has been 31 years since a mentally disturbed man became a crazed gunman as he used an old RV as his arsenal and armed with 15 weapons and 3,000 rounds of ammunition, stepped to the doorway, placed his hand on the trigger of an automatic weapon and began spraying the crowd with projectiles of tragedy.

It was called “Black Friday,” and before the fusillade of bullets ended, two persons died and 52 others were wounded. However, the scene could have been a much larger killing field had not the sniper’s weapon jammed.

Sixty-four-year old Ira Attebury, a native of the Midwest who carried a grudge against the San Antonio Police Department, initially targeted the six officers who were assigned to the intersection of Broadway and Grayson. His aim was true enough to bring down the veteran lawmen. Fortunately, their wounds were serious and not fatal, but they carried the wounds with them for years and many were forced to retire because of them. Miraculously, they lived through the barrage.

As Attebury continued his rampage, one of his next volleys struck 26-year old Ida Long and 47-year old Mrs. Amelia Castillo, the mother of 13 children. The two women died instantly. Two of Mrs. Castillo’s children were wounded, but not critically.

The bloodbath became a scene of sheer pandemonium as hundreds of festive onlookers, waiting to see the historic Battle of Flowers parade, instead, were trapped in a bloody web of evil.

It brought to mind the infamous escapade at the University of Texas Tower some 13 years earlier when ex-Marine Charles Whitman unleashed his sniper savagery killing 15 victims on the UT campus.

The police radio came alive that Friday afternoon when the words, “officers down …. officers down at Broadway and Grayson” squawked across the air waves. All news operations monitor the police radios and when the alert was heard at KENS-TV, Ronnie Smith and I raced for the Channel 5 live-truck and Ronnie sped toward the scene, just a few blocks from the station which was located at Fourth and Avenue E.

Several news photographers were already in place at various parade route sites, so they were alerted when the police dispatcher relayed the shooting information. Cameraman Joe Flores and news reporter Margo Spitz were near the intersection and Flores began videoing immediately.

Smitty and I turned the corner on Grayson and headed toward Broadway … you could hear the sounds of gunfire and windshields on autos in the lot of San Antonio Motor Imports being blown out. As we approached the Burggraf Tire Company, we saw people running from the intersection like ants fleeing insect spray. Scattered chairs and debris were remnants of the gunman’s wrath. We pulled our live truck within 30 yards of the RV, unaware of the exact origin of the gunfire. All the police officers were down so no one was there to warn us off …. until someone said “Get back, get back. He’s in the RV”.

At that point, Smitty slammed the truck in reverse and backed to Grayson and Alamo. I jumped from the vehicle and crawled through a hole in a fence to be met by flying glass shards as Attebury’s bullets slammed into the car windows.

I sprinted back to the live truck, told Smitty to roll out the video cable and we stretched it almost to the Broadway/Grayson location and began our live reports as chaos continued.

Arriving police officers returned fire….a SWAT team member began firing tear gas canisters into the RV and volunteers, officers and Air Force personnel began pushing an Air Force bus into the intersection to provide cover for escaping spectators.

For more than two hours we continued our reports and I would seek a parade watcher or shooting witness for a live interview. Margo Spitz and Joe Flores joined up with Smitty and I to provide more footage and interviews.

While the horrible event was taking place, my wife Jo, 13-year-old daughter Andrea and 8-year old son Shannon were watching the parade at home. Suddenly, when Andrea saw my first television report, she began screaming to her Mom, “Daddy’s going to get shot! Daddy’s going to get shot!”

Jo was so shaken, she phoned Ray Dudley, assignments editor at KENS-TV and said to him: “Tell him to get the hell out of there.”

Looking back, it was rather dangerous as I was squatting in the middle of the street giving my reports. I’ll never forget a dazed young woman, blood flowing from a head wound, leaning against the bumper of a patrol car clutching a small boy to her bosom. That memorable moment was captured by an Express-News photographer and became the cover picture for Life Magazine.

Image
Express-News file photo

T.J. Lapping is comforted by his aunt, Dianne Wick, while his mother, who was shot in the neck by Ira Attebury is treated nearby on April 27, 1979.


The young woman was Diane Wick, and the boy was her nephew, Tommy Lapping. She told me she heard shots, saw someone fall, turned to her sister and started to speak when her sibling was hit in the throat by an Attebury bullet, and then she too was wounded.

As a man swiftly crossed the street, I stopped him, asked him to kneel down with me and tell me what he had witnessed. Neal Merchant and his family were seated directly across the street from the RV’s door and he related he heard a shot, saw a police officer fall, then witnessed the opening of the RV’s door and smoke coming from a gun. Merchant continued that at least two little kids were hit.

He was angry at the gunman. “I was in Vietnam, and if I had a chance I’d go in there and kill the SOB.”

It could have been even worse and the figures could have been reversed. Rather than two dead and 52 wounded, the casualties might have been 52 dead and two wounded.

The wounded officers were identified as Lt. Gary Nagy, the first hit, He crawled to his nearby squad car. The other victims were Inspector Elroy Crenwelge, Lt. Robert Maldonado, Sgt. Ben Donahoe and Sgt. Tom Barker. They either crawled from the immediate vicinity or were aided by bystanders. The sixth cop wounded was Sgt. L.R. Grassmuck, who was hit in the leg and foot. Patrolman John Scott was injured when his motorcycle overturned as he sped toward the scene.

Chief of Police Emil Peters said Attebury apparently committed suicide after the tragic onslaught and the weapon he was using at the time malfunctioned. But he was also hit by a police officer’s shotgun blast as the patrolman crawled into the RV and saw the killer prone on the floor. The officer was identified as SWAT team member Sgt. Sidney Marsh. There was no doubt after both barrels were emptied that the parade butcher was dead.

As many as 100 police officers swarmed to the scene, cordoned off the area and cleared the streets. The entire episode was over and for the first time in its storied history, the Battle of Flowers parade was canceled. Officers using bullhorns told thousands who were downtown to go home — the parade was over.

Attebury had begun his killing spree immediately after the high school color guard had passed through the intersection…He might well have fired at the kids but apparently decided to direct his fury at the men in police uniforms.

It was a terrible day on that warm spring afternoon but my blood runs cold when I remember those horrifying moments when the man, known as a “loner” and paranoid about the police, claiming they were always watching him, became an instrument of the devil.

It was indeed Black Friday. And now, every year at Battle of Flowers time, I get goosebumps thinking about the battlefield-like conditions that occurred in April of 1979.

Let’s hope and pray it never happens again, in San Antonio or in any other city.


http://blog.mysanantonio.com/garydelaun ... f-flowers/





Ira Attebury

April 27, 1979 in San Antonio, Texas at the Battle of Flowers Parade.

There were 300,000 spectators present. Approximately 5,000 of them were forced to dive for cover.

His first targets were police officers.

He was shooting at anything that moved, and shouting "Traitors, traitors, traitors."

Ida Long, age 26 and Amalia Castillo, age 48 were killed. 50 others were injured, 30 from gunshot wounds, and 20 from the stampede.

He shot himself with a .38 caliber revolver behind his right ear.

He had 15 weapons, including a double barreled shotgun, a semi-automatic pistol, 9 rifles, and 4 .38 caliber revolvers.

He asked permission from the tire store to park his motor home in their parking lot.

He was extremely headstrong, and was frequently fighting with his father.

He had never been married.

He was in a car wreck, and after the car wreck he was disabled, and started imagining things that weren't quite true.

He was extremely paranoid and thought the police were poisoning his water.

He had been forced to leave the trailer park in which he was living because of his paranoid behavior.


http://www.angelfire.com/vamp2/kimmie_j69/ia.html




The Anatomy of Motive - John Douglas Mind Hunter.com - Research Center
...
Ira Attebury (San Antonio, Texas)

On April 27, 1979, sixty-four-year-old Attebury randomly fired shots from his motor home into a crowd of approximately five thousand people, who had gathered in anticipation of the start of the Fiesta Battle of Flowers parade. Two women died, and about fifty other people were injured. After a half an hour of gunfire, this mass murderer finally turned the gun on himself and died.
For more information about this case, including insight into what may have led up to the crime, please refer to pages 286-291 in The Anatomy of Motive.

http://www.johndouglasmindhunter.com/re ... natomy.php





Your Turn - Nov. 11 / Letters to the Editor
Published 03:06 p.m., Tuesday, November 10, 2009
...

Courage under fire

On April 26, 1979, my friend Sallie and I were comfortably settled at Broadway and Grayson Street to watch the Battle of Flowers Parade during Fiesta. Across the street, Ira Attebury, a drugged person in a camper, began to fire on people in the crowd.

As soon as we became aware that this was not pre-parade fireworks, we began to gather children sitting in front of us and hid behind small cars in the Motor Imports car lot behind us. We stayed hidden and scared for an hour.

At Fort Hood, someone opened fire on a gathering place there. There was no hiding in fear.

The troops and medics were not carrying firearms, but they went toward the gunfire. This is the U.S. military. Thanks be to God for every one of them.

Barbara A. Hayden

http://www.mysanantonio.com/opinion/let ... 846894.php





Fiesta fun: Battle of Flowers highlights history, community
by Gary Cooper / KENS 5
Posted on April 23, 2010 at 12:28 AM
Updated Friday, Apr 23 at 12:38 PM
....

Evolution of the Parade

In the coming years, the parade evolved into a weeklong celebration with its own queen and royal court and became a must-attend event for South Texans.

Sometimes, outside events have put a halt to the Battle of Flowers. For instance, the parade was not held during the two world wars.

The progression and commemoration of Texas heroes still took place in those war years, Boone said, but “other resources were devoted to the war effort … so the parade was placed on hold for those times.”

The Battle of Flowers also was canceled in 1979 after a gunman opened fire on police and spectators prior to that year’s parade. Ira Attebury, who police say was fueled by drugs and a grudge against SAPD, killed three people and injured 52 others before officers shot him.

KENS 5 reporter Gary Delaune and photographer Ron “Smitty” Smith memorably brought images of the sniper scene to San Antonio television sets. Despite the tragic events of that day, the parade returned the next year and continues to serve as an annual cultural touchstone for San Antonians.

http://www.kens5.com/home/Fiesta-showca ... 31784.html





Brother refers to sniper as man out to kill people
By Frank Patrick - Express-News
Originally published on April 28, 1979.

Ira Attebury, grew up in the country, a hunter of rabbits and small game.

But his mind twisted tragically in recent years, and the huntsman sought human quarry instead.

That was the conclusion reached by a man who knew him well, Attebury's brother Roy, 59.

Roy Attebury, contacted in Naylor, Mo., by the Express-News shortly after he learned of Friday's San Antonio sniping tragedy, said he had noticed a bizarre change in his brother in the past couple of years.

"He felt the police were following him all the time," Attebury said.

Attebury said he felt his brother had gone off the deep end and set out to kill people. He said he did not think his brother would ever kill himself.

"No way. I don't think so," he said.

According to Attebury, his brother's fixation about the police seemed deep-rooted. "But it was all in his imagination," he said.

Attebury said his dead brother had visited Naylor, a town of about 600 nestled in the hills in the southeastern part of the state near the Arkansas border, last fall. He visited every six months or so, the relatives said, to see a physician about a heart condition.

"He couldn't do anything," Attebury said, when quizzed about the heart condition.

Ira Attebury was a former independent trucker who never married. His brother said he was drawing disability checks. He said he did not think Attebury had worked regularly for several years.

Roy Attebury said he and his brother were part of a large family of seven boys and two girls. He said Ira used to hunt in the wild terrain near Naylor. "But that's all bulldozed now," he said.

His brother was not a gentle man, but not too rough, Attebury said.

Ira Attebury reportedly served in the coast guard during World War II. His brother indicated that, besides the routine hunting experiences, he was not aware of any particular training Ira Attebury might have had in firearms.

http://www.mysanantonio.com/news/specia ... eople.html




Survivors recall Fiesta terror | WOPULAR
http://www.wopular.com/survivors-recall-fiesta-terror
Apr 25, 2009 – Ira Attebury killed two people and injured at least 50 at the 1979 Battle of Flowers Parade.Terror RememberedmySA History: Fiesta sniper ...





Fiesta celebrates the city's spirit
By Roy Bragg / rbragg@express-news.net
Updated 01:37 a.m., Sunday, April 10, 2011
...

In 1979, tragedy took center stage when gunman Ira Attebury barricaded himself in a recreational vehicle and opened fire on the crowd gathered to watch the Battle of Flowers Parade.

He killed two spectators and wounded six police officers. At least 50 others, including 13 children, were injured. He eventually shot himself to death.

...

http://www.mysanantonio.com/fiesta/arti ... 330338.php





[DOC] Download File - CoffeeCops.net
coffeecops.weebly.com/uploads/2/9/8/8/.../fiesta_sniper_april_27_1979.do...You +1'd this publicly. Undo
File Format: Microsoft Word - Quick View
Apr 28, 1979 – http://media.mysanantonio.com/images/Sniper1.jpg ... opened fire on a festive crowd gathered Friday to watch the Battle of Flowers Parade, ... The gunman, tentatively identified late Friday as Ira Attebury, 64, ...

http://coffeecops.weebly.com/uploads/2/ ... 7_1979.doc

http://docs.google.com/viewer





Bloody 'battle of flowers' [Articles] Page 2, REUTER

Bloody 'battle of flowers' SAN ANTONIO (Texas), Sat. A gunman killed two people and wounded 32 when be sprayed automatic rifle fire into a packet crowd during San Antonio's "Bat tie of the Flowers" festival. Police identified the gunmar as Ira Attebury, 61, but said the] had no idea why... (63 words)

http://newspapers.nl.sg/Digitised/Issue ... 90429.aspx

User avatar
elfismiles
 
Posts: 8512
Joined: Fri Aug 11, 2006 6:46 pm
Blog: View Blog (4)

Re: Ira Attebury Shooting at 1979 Battle of Flowers Parade

Postby elfismiles » Wed Apr 17, 2013 2:52 pm


In wake of Boston attack, KENS 5 stalwarts recall S.A.'s Fiesta sniper (Video)
by Dillon Collier / KENS 5
Bio | Email | Follow: @dilloncollier
Posted on April 16, 2013 at 5:40 PM
Updated today at 10:44 AM

Related:
•1979: Sniper fires into Battle of Flowers crowdsadd to reading list

Its been nearly 34 years since Ira Attebury opened fire on hundreds of people gathered near Broadway and Grayson for the Battle of Flowers Parade, the highlight of San Antonio's Fiesta celebration.

Memories of that day gave flooding back for many longtime San Antonians as news spread about Monday's Boston Marathon attack.

"Black Friday we called it. Pretty much Black Friday," said longtime KENS 5 reporter Gary DeLaune, who had been assigned to cover the parade festivities on April 27, 1979.

Moments after meeting up with photographer Ron "Smitty" Smith, DeLaune heard shots being fired and glass being shattered.

"We were dodging bullets a few minutes. It was kind of scary, I don't mind saying," Smith said.

With people being dragged to safety serving as a terrifying backdrop, DeLaune and Smith provided live coverage of the rampage for the next three hours and 20 minutes.

Once police stormed Attebury's RV and discovered his body, DeLaune handed the microphone over to Smith and went to gather more information.

Without missing a beat, Smith continued to provide viewers details about the hours-long ordeal.

The shooting left two women dead: 26-year-old Ida Long and 47-year-old Amelia Castillo, a mother of 13.

Fifity-two other people, including six San Antonio police officers, were wounded.

The tragic events of that day did not keep San Antonio down for long, though.

"San Antonio recovered beautifully from it. The next year, the parade went on as planned," DeLaune said. "It's a time that's tragic, but you turn the page and go on. It's all you can do."

http://www.kens5.com/news/KENS-5-stalwa ... 84411.html

User avatar
elfismiles
 
Posts: 8512
Joined: Fri Aug 11, 2006 6:46 pm
Blog: View Blog (4)

Re: Ira Attebury Shooting at 1979 Battle of Flowers Parade

Postby elfismiles » Wed Apr 17, 2013 2:58 pm

1979: Sniper fires into Battle of Flowers crowds (Video)
by KENS 5 staff
Posted on September 1, 2011 at 1:49 PM
Updated Monday, Oct 10 at 10:18 PM
Related:
•In wake of Boston attack, KENS 5 stalwarts recall S.A.'s Fiesta sniperadd to reading list

SAN ANTONIO -- The Battle of Flowers Parade is one of Fiesta's most cherished and biggest events but it was also the scene of one San Antonio's most horriffic events.

In April of 1979, Ida Attaberry barricaded himself inside his RV and began randomly firing into the crowd who had gathered for the parade along Broadway Rd. A standoff occurred and by the time the bullets stopped flying - four people, including Attaberry were dead.

Fifty-three other people were injured including 5 police officers and the parade was ultimately cancelled that day.

A KENS 5 crew was yards away while the shots were fired and captured this dramatic report. Watch the video from the KENS 5 video vault.

http://www.kens5.com/news/remembering-w ... 98288.html
User avatar
elfismiles
 
Posts: 8512
Joined: Fri Aug 11, 2006 6:46 pm
Blog: View Blog (4)

Re: Ira Attebury Shooting at 1979 Battle of Flowers Parade

Postby elfismiles » Wed Apr 17, 2013 8:02 pm

Cut at the core: Fiesta sniper victims' families still in pain 33 years later (Video)
by Marvin Hurst / KENS 5
Bio | Email | Follow: @marvinhurst
Posted on April 27, 2012 at 9:42 AM
Updated Friday, Apr 27 at 1:22 PM

Perry Brown's tenth birthday was impossible to celebrate. The day before, April 27, 1979, his sister became a causality of a sniper at the Battle of Flowers Parade. Instead of the joy of getting one year older, April 28 was filled with heartbreak.

"For years, nobody in the family talked about it," Brown said. "Nobody in the family would go to parades... Nothing like that."

Ida Jean Dollar was one of four people killed during a barrage of gunfire from Ira Attebury. The gunman died, too. San Antonio police said he was inside of a recreational vehicle shooting into an unsuspecting crowd.

A total 53 people were reportedly injured, including five police officers.

Brown recalls falling on his niece to shield her from gunfire. He says he watched as his sister was fatally wounded. Her young daughter had no clue what her 9-year-old uncle had just witnessed.

Thirty-three years later, Dollar's family want people to know Ida Jean was a contributor to society. The state worker was a mother of two.

"She was a human being with a future, a family, an extended family with friends that loved her dearly," Brown said.

He says they all still miss her to this day. He relives the pain in hopes that his sister won't be just a blip in history's pages.

http://www.kens5.com/news/Victims-famil ... 22895.html
User avatar
elfismiles
 
Posts: 8512
Joined: Fri Aug 11, 2006 6:46 pm
Blog: View Blog (4)

Re: Ira Attebury Shooting at 1979 Battle of Flowers Parade

Postby FourthBase » Wed Apr 17, 2013 9:05 pm

Good god, elfismiles. Thank you, for sharing.
“Joy is a current of energy in your body, like chlorophyll or sunlight,
that fills you up and makes you naturally want to do your best.” - Bill Russell
User avatar
FourthBase
 
Posts: 7057
Joined: Thu May 05, 2005 4:41 pm
Blog: View Blog (0)

Re: Ira Attebury Shooting at 1979 Battle of Flowers Parade

Postby elfismiles » Sat Apr 27, 2013 12:23 am

34th anniversary ... this very long piece quotes my high-school remembrance in a couple of key places. Lots of info in here, probably the most comprehensive info I've come across.

Ira Theadore Attebery
A Dark Family Secret
The Whole Story

The Battle of the Flowers Parade
April 27, 1979


Hidden somewhere in the closet of family history can be found dark secrets of individuals from which the rest of us feel repulsed and ashamed. But just like the inspiring stories of family heroes, these shameful stories are a part of the fabric of our whole family. And as time goes by historical perspective helps us put these dark stories into their proper places, not something to be featured on the front page and glorified, but something worth knowing about … because it is a part of the truth of our whole story.

This is a story of which I knew basically what had happened, but since it was seldom ever mentioned in family circles, no one had ever fully revealed the details of what happened on that fateful day of April 27, 1979, in San Antonio, Texas. So I went looking for the whole truth and this is what I was able to compile from numerous sources - books, magazines, newspaper articles, online articles and blogs, including several first hand accounts as well as my own personal knowledge of the events leading up to that awful day...

MORE HERE
http://familythenandnow.org/Data_Files/ ... e-1b.shtml



Ira Theadore Attebery
Time Line
of Life

Born: April 29, 1914

Birthplace: Corning, Arkansas
Birthplace
Map

Died: April 27, 1979

Location: San Antonio, Texas
Deathplace
Map

Buried at: Poplar Bluff, Missouri

Age: 64 Sex: Male

Father: William Oscar Attebery

Mother: Luvina Hocking Attebery
Pedigree
Chart
http://familythenandnow.org/Data_Files/ ... AACW.shtml
User avatar
elfismiles
 
Posts: 8512
Joined: Fri Aug 11, 2006 6:46 pm
Blog: View Blog (4)

Re: Ira Attebury Shooting at 1979 Battle of Flowers Parade

Postby elfismiles » Fri May 05, 2017 12:36 pm

Another survivor (who is also a anti-chemtrail activist) posted this video dealing with her trauma and featuring the original live news footage:

1979 by SWS Sky

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bZAKGjGzF_k

1979: Sniper fires into Battle of Flowers crowds
http://www.kens5.com/news/local/1979-sn ... /352197001

KSAT TV News Coverage on Fiesta Sniper 1979 - SanAntonioNews78

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Oz2HenoVXCc

1979 Fiesta Shooting In San Antonio. Then & Now. - WoodyTV

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LKXzJ5wuIZA
User avatar
elfismiles
 
Posts: 8512
Joined: Fri Aug 11, 2006 6:46 pm
Blog: View Blog (4)

Re: Ira Attebury Shooting at 1979 Battle of Flowers Parade

Postby elfismiles » Fri May 05, 2017 12:51 pm

Hero of Fiesta sniper shooting gets long-deserved recognition
By Lomi Kriel, Staff Writer Updated 3:28 pm, Wednesday, April 17, 2013
http://www.mysanantonio.com/news/local_ ... 441763.php

Friday parade marks 35th anniversary of sniper rampage
Reporters, first responders recall April 27, 1979, Fiesta horror
By Jessie Degollado - Reporter
Posted: 8:16 PM, April 24, 2014
Updated: 8:16 PM, April 24, 2014
http://www.ksat.com/entertainment/fiest ... er-rampage

Image
User avatar
elfismiles
 
Posts: 8512
Joined: Fri Aug 11, 2006 6:46 pm
Blog: View Blog (4)


Return to General Discussion

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 175 guests