- Griselio Torresola
and wounded two other law enforcement officers. However, Torresola was killed by a shot to the head from the mortally wounded Coffelt.
Early life and political background
Torresola came from a family which believed in the Puerto Rican independence cause. They had participated in many of the island's past revolts. Torresola moved to the City of
New York City in August 1948. He was employed by a New York stationery and perfume store. A divorce from his first wife affected him emotionally and eventually he lost his job. He remarried and lived with one of his two children on a welfare check of $125 a month.Torresola was a member of the
Puerto Rican Nationalist Party and soon joined forces with fellow NationalistOscar Collazo . They participated in the attempted assassination of president Truman onNovember 1 ,1950 , while the president was residing in theBlair-Lee House while theWhite House was being renovated. The Nationalist Party was led by the charismaticPedro Albizu Campos , for whom Torresola was a bodyguard. The party had rejected political participation through balloting and advocated violent resistance to the annexation of Puerto Rico by the U.S.Nationalists were increasingly angered by what they viewed as great injustices, including the
Ponce Massacre , the extrajudicial murders of some members, the jailing of Albizu for his advocacy of violent resistance, and the impending changes of Puerto Rico's status from a non-autonomous territory to a partially self-governing commonwealth. They viewedPuerto Rico as acolony demanding independence. OnOctober 30 ,1950 his brother and sister participated in the failedJayuya Uprising .On November1,1987 in the cemetery@Jayuya stood near the grave and tombstone of Griselio Torresola nationalist and people stood about as man spoke about the one in the grave.OsccarCollazo,RafaelCancelMiranda.Irvin Flores y la hija de Maestro Albizo Compos,ecoavila puertorican national guard y year after year less and less people visit the graveyard on November1th of any century and year.The assassination attempt
In the attack on the
Blair House , Griselio andOscar Collazo attempted to enter the President's residence and assassinate him.Torresola walked up Pennsylvania Avenue from the west side while his partner, Oscar Collazo, engaged Secret Service Agents and White House policemen with his
Walther P 38 from the east. Torresola approached a guard booth at the west corner of the Blair-Lee house, and noted an officer, Leslie Coffelt, sitting inside. Torresola, in a double handed, isosceles shooting stance, quickly pivoted from left to right around the opening of the booth, and fired four shots from his 9 mm GermanLuger , semi-automatic pistol at close range at Coffelt. Three of the shots struck Coffelt in the chest and abdomen, and the fourth went through his policeman's tunic. Coffelt slumped down in his chair, mortally wounded.Torresola then turned his attention to plainclothes White House policeman
Joseph Downs . Downs, who had just paused to chat with Coffelt, proceeded down the walkway to the basement door at the west end of the Blair-Lee house when he heard shots being fired. Downs noticed Torresola, but was shot once in the hip before he could draw his weapon. Downs turned back towards the house, and was shot twice more by Torresola, once in the back and once in the neck. Downs staggered to the basement door, opened it, slid in, and then slammed the door behind him, depriving Torresola of entry into the Blair-Lee House.Torresola then turned his attention to the sound of the shoot-out between his partner, Collazo, and several law enforcement officers. Torresola noted wounded policeman
Donald Birdzell aiming at Collazo from the south side of Pennsylvania Avenue. Torresola aimed in and shot Birdzell in the left knee from a distance of approximately 40 feet.Then Torresola's gun ran dry.
Torresola now stood to the immediate left of the Blair House steps while he reloaded. At the same time, President Truman, asleep in his second floor bedroom, awoke to the sound of gunfire outside. President Truman went to his bedroom window, opened it, and looked outside. From where he stood reloading, Torresola was thirty-one feet away from that window. It is unknown whether either man saw the other.
At the same time, the mortally wounded Coffelt staggered out of his guard booth, leaned against it, and aimed his revolver at Torresola, who was approximately 20 feet away. Coffelt squeezed the trigger and fired, hitting Torresola two inches above the ear on a slight upward angle and blowing out a portion of his brain. Torresola was killed instantly. Coffelt would later succumb to his wounds.
The gunfight involving Torresola lasted approximately 20 seconds, while the gunfight with Collazo lasted 38.5 seconds.
Oscar Collazo was sentenced to death, later commuted by Truman to a life sentence. He died in 1994.
Collazo is quoted as saying "It would not be justice to Griselio if we merely remembered him for his ability with weapons. We must remember the brave and expert guerilla of the mountains of
Jayuya as the patriot who never had doubts when his country called him to completion of his duty."Torresola left behind a young wife and two young children. He is considered a hero among those who favor independence for Puerto Rico.
Leslie Coffelt left behind a wife and family in
Virginia . A plaque at the Blair-Lee House commemorates Coffelt's sacrifice, heroism, and fidelity to his duty and his country.References
*
Stephen Hunter andJohn Bainbridge, Jr. , "American Gunfight: The Plot To Kill Harry Truman - And The Shoot-Out That Stopped It". Simon & Schuster (2005), ISBN 0-7432-6068-6. This is the source for the description of the gunfight.See also
*
List of famous Puerto Ricans
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