Busboy at RFK’s side is letting go of the guilt
Juan Romero, the Ambassador Hotel busboy who cradled a dying Robert F. Kennedy after he was shot on June 5, 1968, carried the weight of that moment through the decades. Now, he says, “I don’t carry the cross anymore.”
(Peter DaSilva / For The Times)A stunned Juan Romero holds Robert Kennedy’s head after the presidential candidate was mortally wounded at the Ambassador Hotel.
(Boris Yaro / Los Angeles Times)Juan Romero pauses at the RFK Memorial in St. James Park in San Jose. “He made me feel like a regular citizen,” Romero says of the night he delivered room service to Kennedy at the Ambassador Hotel. “He made me feel like a human being.”
(Peter DaSilva / For The Times )Juan Romero would carry the weight of RFK’s assassination through the decades. He still thinks about the slain senator, he said, but he no longer drowns in sorrow or regret. “I don’t carry the cross anymore,” he said.
(Peter DaSilva / For The Times)