Read True Adventures of the Rolling Stones Online
Authors: Stanley Booth
“Under My Thumb” startedâ“Hey! Hey! Under my thumb is a girl who once had me downâ” and Mick had sung only the first line of the song when there was a sudden movement in the crowd at stage left. I looked away from Mick and saw, with that now-familiar instant space around him, bordered with falling bodies, a Beale Street nigger in a black hat, black shirt, iridescent blue-green suit, arms and legs stuck out at crazy angles, a nickle-plated revolver in his hand. The gun waved in the lights for a second, two, then he was hit, so hard, by so many Angels, that I didn't see the first oneâshort, Mexican-looking, the one who led me onstage?âas he jumped. I saw him as he came down, burying a long knife in the black man's back. Angels covered the black man like flies on a stinking carcass. The attack carried the victim behind the stack of speakers, and I never saw him again.
The black man, Meredith Hunter, nicknamed Murdock, was eighteen years old. He had come to Altamont with his girlfriend, Patty Bredehoft, a blond Berkeley High School student, and another couple. They had arrived in Hunter's car at about two o'clock in the afternoon, parked on the highway and walked over to hear the bands. Near the end of the day Patty Bredehoft and the other couple were back at the car when Hunter, who had been hanging around the stage area, came to get her to go hear the Rolling Stones. Later she told the Alameda County Grand Jury, “When we finally worked our way up to the front of the crowd and the Rolling Stones started playing, there was a lot of pushing and there were Angels on the stage. And Murdock kept trying to go farther up toward the front. I couldn't keep up with him because I wasn't strong so I sort of waited back, didn't try to get as far as he did. He was as close as he could get, where there were some boxes with people standing on the boxes. I'd say there was about five people in between me and him, estimating, because the crowd was moving around, but I could see the upper part of his body.
“I was getting pushed around, and as I glanced up there, I saw either he had hit Murdock or pushed him or something, but this Hell's Angel who was standing, pushed him or knocked him back. It didn't knock him down, but knocked him back over the stage, and as he started to
come back forward towards the Hell's Angel, another Hell's Angel who was on the stage grabbed him around the neck. They were scuffling around. I'm not sure which Hell's Angel it was, but I just remember he was scuffling around and there was a couple of people blocking my view of him because he was down on the ground. I couldn't really see him. As the people backed away, Murdock came around by my side and pulled a gun out. Then they came towardâwell, a group of Hell's AngelsâI'm not sure they were all Hell's Angels, but I know most of them wereâthey came toward him and they reached for his arm and then they were all kicking and fighting and stuff, Murdock and the Hell's Angels, and the fight more or less moved around towards where the scaffold was on the edge of the stage.
“I followed them around and then I was standing there watching them fight, or watching whateverâI couldn't really tell what was going on underneath the scaffold, and the Hell's AngelâI thought he was, was a Hell's Angel, but I wasn't quite sure because he had the jeans jacket on, but I couldn't see the back to see if it had colors on. He was holding the gun in his hand, laying in the palm of his hand, to show it to me, and he said something like, âThis is what we took from him. He was going to kill innocent people, so he deserved to be dead.' ”
A young man named Paul Cox, who had been standing beside Meredith Hunter before the violence started, talked to the grand jury and to
Rolling Stone.
“An Angel kept looking over at me and I tried to keep ignoring him and I didn't want to look at him at all, because I was very scared of them and seeing what they were doing all day and because he kept trying to cause a fight or something and kept staring at us. He kept on looking over, and the next thing I know he's hassling this Negro boy on the side of me. And I was trying not to look at him, and then he reached over and shook this boy by the side of the head, thinking it was fun, laughing, and I noticed something was going to happen so I kind of backed off.
“The boy yanked away, and when he yanked away, next thing I know he was flying in the air, right on the ground, just like all the other people it happened to. He scrambled to his feet, and he's backing up and he's trying to run from the Angels, and all these Angels areâa couple jumped off the stage and a couple was running alongside the stage, and his girlfriend was screaming to him not to shoot, because he pulled out his gun. And when he pulled it out, he held it in the air and his girlfriend is like climbing on him and pushing him back and he's trying to get away and these Angels are coming at him and he turns around and starts running. And then some Angel snuck up from right out of the crowd and leaped up and brought this knife down in his back. And then I saw him stab him again, and while he's stabbing him, he's running. This Negro boy is running into the crowd, and you could see him stiffen up when he's being stabbed.
“He came running toward me. I grabbed onto the scaffold, and he came running kind of toward me and fell down on his knees, and the Hell's Angel grabbed onto both of his shoulders and started kicking him in the face about five times or so and then he fell down on his face. He let go and he fell down on his face. And then one of them kicked him on the side and he rolled over, and he muttered some words. He said, âI wasn't going to shoot you.' That was the last words he muttered.
“If some other people would have jumped in I would have jumped in. But nobody jumped in and after he said, âI wasn't going to shoot you,' one of the Hell's Angels said, âWhy did you have a gun?' He didn't give him time to say anything. He grabbed one of those garbage cans, the cardboard ones with the metal rimming, and he smashed him over the head with it, and then he kicked the garbage can out of the way and started kicking his head in. Five of them started kicking his head in. Kicked him all over the place. And then the guy that started the whole thing stood on his head for a minute or so and then walked off. And then the one I was talking about, he wouldn't let us touch him for about two or three minutes. Like, âDon't touch him, he's going to die anyway, let him die, he's going to die.'
“Chicks were just screaming. It was all confusion. I jumped down anyway to grab him and some other dude jumped down and grabbed him, and then the Hell's Angel just stood over him for a little bit and then walked away. We turned him over and ripped off his shirt. We rubbed his back up and down to get the blood off so we could see, and there was a big hole in his spine and a big hole on the side and there was a big hole in his temple. A big open slice. You could see all the way in. You could see inside. You could see at least an inch down. And then there was a big hole right where there's no ribs on his backâand then the side of his head was just sliced openâyou couldn't see so far inâit was bleeding quite heavilyâbut his back wasn't bleeding too heavy after thatâthereâall of us were drenched in blood.
“I picked up his legs and someone else . . . this guy said he was a doctor or something . . . I don't know who he was . . . he picked up his arms and he said, âGot to get him some help because he's going to die. We've got fifteen or twenty minutes, if we can get him some help. . . .' And so we tried to carry him on the stage. Tell Mick Jagger to stop playing so we could get him on the stage and get some attention for him. No one told Jagger that, but someone was trying to tell him to stop and he kept leaning over and looking out at the crowd like he was paying attention and trying to figure out what was happening. He kept leaning over with his ear trying to hear what somebody was telling him, but he couldn't hear. So they kept on playing and the Hell's Angels wouldn't let us through . . . get on the stage. They kept blocking us, saying go around, go through some other way. They knew he was going to die in a matter of minutes. They wanted him to die probably so he couldn't
talk. And so we carried . . . we turned around and went the other way. It took about fifteen minutes to get him behind the stage. We went around that whole thing and got behind where there was a Red Cross truck, something like that. And someone brought out a metal stretcher and laid him on that. Well, first we laid him on the ground. And then we felt his pulse and it was just barely doing it . . . real slow and real weak. His whole mouth and stuff is bashed up into his nose and stuff and he couldn't breathe out of his nose. He was trying to breathe out of his mouth. There really wasn't anything you could do. We carried him over to some station wagon and then whoever owned the car hopped in and some other people hopped in and I stayed there. I went over and they had this thing of coffee and I had it . . . poured it all over to wipe off all the blood.”
The doctor who helped to carry Hunter backstage was Robert Hiatt, a medical resident at the Public Health Hospital in San Francisco. “He was limp in my hands and unconscious,” Hiatt said. “He was still breathing then, though quite shallowly, and he had a very weak pulse. It was obvious he wasn't going to make it, but if anything could be done, he would have to get to a hospital quickly. He had very serious wounds.”
Dr. Richard Baldwin, a general practitioner from Point Reyes who saw Hunter backstage, said, “He got a bad injury in that they got him in the back and it went in between the ribs and the side of the spine, and there's nothing but big arteries in there, the aorta, the main artery in the body, and a couple kidney arteries. And if you hit one of those you're dead. You're dead in less than a minute and there's nothing anyone can do. In other words, if you're standing in front of the hospital or even if he was stabbed in an operating room, there's nothing they could have done to save him. That's one of those injuries that's just irreparable.”
When the trouble with the boy in the green suit started, the Stones had stopped playing. “Okay, man,” Keith said, “look, we're splitting, if those cats, if you can'tâwe're splitting, if those people don't stop beating everybody up in sightâI want 'em
out of the way.”
An Angel in front of the stage was trying to tell Keith something, but Keith wouldn't listen. “I don't like
you
to tell meâ” he went on, but another Angel, onstage, stopped him. “Look, man,” the Angel said, “a guy's got a gun out there, and he's shootin' at the stageâ”
“Got a gun,” someone else yelled.
Mike Lang, one of the organizers of Woodstock, who had been helping with this concert, took the microphone. “Peopleâhey peopleâc'mon let's be coolâpeople, pleaseâthere's no reason to hassle anybody, please don't be mad at anybodyâplease relax and sit down. . . .”
Sam, who'd been standing by with his hands jammed in his pockets,
took over. “If you move back and sit down,” he said, “we can continue and we will continue. We need a doctor under the left-hand scaffold as soon as possible please.” He was listening to shouts from the front of the crowd. He listened to a girl for a few seconds and went on: “There's a Red Cross building at the top of the stage and there's been lots of lost childing, children, under the scaffoldâif you've lost a child go and collect him or her there pleaseâit's a Red Cross van. . . .”
After another pause during which no one onstage did anything but look anxiously around, Mick said, “It seems to be stuck down to meâwill you listen to me for a minuteâplease listen to me just for one second a'right? First of all, everyone is gonna get to the side of the stage who's on it now except for the Stones who are playing. Please, everyoneâeveryone, please, can you get to the side of the stage who's not playing. Right? That's a start. Now, the thing is, I can't see what's going on, who is doing wot, it's just a scuffle. All I can ask you, San Francisco, is like the whole thingâthis could be the most beautiful evening we've had this winter. We reallyây'know, why, whyâdon't let's fuck it up, man, come onâlet's get it togetherâeveryoneâcome
on
nowâI can't see you up on the hillsides, you're probably very cool. Down here we're not so cool, we've got a lot of hassles goin' on. I justâevery cat. . . .”
There were shouts from the darkness. Mick peered out blindly past the stage lights and answered, “Yeah, I know, we can't even see you but I know you're whereâyou're cool. We're just trying to keep it together. I can't do any more than ask youâbeg you, just to keep it together. You can do it, it's within your powerâeveryoneâHell's Angels, everybody. Let's just keep ourselves together.
“You know,” Mick said with a sudden burst of passion, “if we
are
all one, let's fucking well
show
we're all one. Now there's one thing we needâSam, we need an ambulanceâwe need a doctor by that scaffold there, if there's a doctor can he get to there. Okay, we're gonna, we gonna doâI don't know what the fuck we gonna do. Everyone just sit down. Keep cool. Let's just
relax,
let's get into a groove. Come on, we can get it together. Come on.”
“Under My Thumb” was starting to churn again. The band sounded amazingly sharp. The crowd was more still. Without knowing exactly what, we all felt that something bad had happened. I assumed, and I was not given to flights of horrible imaginings, that the Angels had killed several people. Gram told me later that he saw Meredith Hunter lifted up, with a great spreading ketchup-colored stain on the back of his suit. Ronnie was running to the First Aid tent, outdistancing the Hell's Angel who had been leading him. Hunter was there when Ronnie came up, calling for a doctor. A cop said, “You don't have to scream for a doctor for this guy, he's dead.”
Over the last notes of “Under My Thumb,” Mick sang, “It's all rightâI pray that it's all rightâI pray that it's all rightâit's all rightâ”