William Robert Greer (September 22, 1909 – February 23, 1985) was an Irish-born agent of the U.S. Secret Service, best known as being the driver of President John F. Kennedy's presidential limousine in the motorcade through Dealey Plaza in Dallas on November 22, 1963, when the president was assassinated.
Greer's duties brought him into close contact with Kennedy, and he can be seen in several pictures with the Kennedy family. He chauffeured the president on many occasions, including in Dallas. As with all agents involved, there has much speculation about, and criticism of, his actions on that day. Greer testified before the Warren Commission on March 9, 1964. Greer testified that he heard three shots, the first he thought was the back-fire of a motorcycle and so did not react. About three or four seconds later he heard a second shot which prompted him to turn around and as he did so he noticed Governor Connally was wounded. He describes the second and third shots as occurring "simultaneously, one behind the other".Warren Commission Hearings, Volume II, pp. 117-8 When they arrived at Parkland Hospital Greer helped bring Kennedy into the emergency room and according to Greer it looked like the top right rear of Kennedy's head was "all blown off".Warren Commission Hearings, Volume II, p. 124.
According to Greer's nephew, Ken Torrens, when he asked Greer if he thought Oswald was guilty he replied "No comment" and that "I’m not allowed to talk about it".
Greer retired on disability from the Secret Service in 1966 due to a stomach peptic ulcer that grew worse following the Kennedy assassination. In 1973 he relocated to Waynesville, North Carolina, where he later died of cancer.
No agents were disciplined for their performance during the shooting, but privately, Jackie Kennedy was bitterly critical of the agents' performance, Greer's in particular, comparing him to the Kennedy children's nanny.Mary Gallagher, My Life With Jacqueline Kennedy, McKay, 1969, pp. 343, 351 Greer later apologized to her, as William Manchester recounted in his semi-authorized account of the assassination: "Bill Greer, his face streaked with tears, took her head between his hands and squeezed until she thought he was going to squeeze her skull flat. He cried, 'Oh, Mrs. Kennedy, oh my God, oh my God. I didn’t mean to do it, I didn’t hear, I should have swerved (sic) the car, I couldn’t help it. Oh, Mrs. Kennedy, as soon as I saw it I swerved. If only I’d seen in time! Oh!' Then he released her head and put his arms around her and wept on her shoulder."William Manchester, The Death of a President, Harper & Row, 1967, p. 290.
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