The New York
Times
December 1980
John Lennon, who was widely
regarded as the most thoughtful and outspoken of the four Beatles
during their peak of popularity during the 1960's, dropped out of
the music business, to devote his attention to his newly-born son,
Sean, and to his wife, Yoko Ono. Then in November 1980, he reentered
the pop mainstream with the introduction of a new album, "Double
Fantasy," which, Lennon said at the time, was an extension of
his family life, as the songs were direct celebrations of enduring
love and the pleasures of home and hearth.
On December 8, 1980 at around
5 p.m., John and Yoko left their apartment in the historic Dakota
on Central Park West in New York City to go to their recording studio
to supervise the transfer of some of the "Double Fantasy"
album numbers to singles. David Geffen, their record producer and
friend, said that more than 700,000 copies of the album had already
been sold up to that time.
As they were leaving the
Dakota, they were approached by several people who were seeking autographs.
Among them was a man who would be later identified as Mark David Chapman.
John Lennon scribbled an autograph on the cover of "Double Fantasy"
for Chapman.
The Lennons spent several
hours at the studio on West 44th Street, returning to the Dakota at
about 10:50 p.m. They exited their limousine on the 72nd Street curb
even though a car could have driven through the entrance and into
the courtyard.
Three witnesses--a doorman
at the entrance, an elevator operator and a cab driver who had just
dropped off a passenger--saw Mark David Chapman standing in the shadows
just inside the arch.
As the Lennons walked by,
Chapman called, "Mr. Lennon." Then he dropped into "a
combat stance" and fired four pistol shots. According to the
autopsy, two shots struck John Lennon in the left side of his back
and two in his left shoulder. All four caused internal damage and
bleeding.
According to police, Lennon
staggered up six steps to the room at the end of the entrance used
by the concierge, said, "I'm shot," then fell down.
The first policemen at the
scene were Officers Steve Spire and Peter Cullen, who were in the
patrol car at 72nd Street and Broadway when they heard a report of
shots fired at the Dakota. The officers found Chapman standing "very
calmly" where he had been.
The police said he had dropped
the revolver after firing it, and said Chapman had a paperback book,
J.D. Salinger's "The Catcher in the Rye," and a cassette
recorder with 14 hours of Beatles tapes.
The second police team at
the Dakota, Officers Bill Gamble and James Moran, took Lennon to Roosevelt
Hospital. Officer Moran said they stretched Lennon out on the back
seat and that the singer was "moaning." He said he asked,
"Are you John Lennon?" and that Lennon had moaned, "Yeah."
Dr. Stephen Lyman of Roosevelt
Hospital said Lennon was dead when the policemen arrived with him.
He was pronounced dead at 11:15 p.m. Dr. Elliott M. Gross, the Chief
Medical Examiner, said after the autopsy that Lennon had died of shock
and loss of blood and that no one could have lived more than a few
minutes with such injuries.
Yoko Ono, crying "Tell
me it's not true," was taken to Roosevelt Hospital and led away
in shock after she learned her husband was dead. David Geffen later
issued a statement in her behalf: "John loved and prayed for
the human race. Please do the same for him."
Within minutes of the first
broadcasts of the news of the shooting, people began to gather at
Roosevelt Hospital and in front of the Dakota, reciting prayers, singing
Lennon's songs and burning candles.
On December 14, all around
the world, people paused to stand alone or come together in silence,
heeding a plea from Yoko Ono that they take 10 minutes to remember
the former Beatle.