ames Brady (L), the Reagan Administration press secretary who was wounded during the 1981 attempted assassination of then President Ronald Reagan, watches as U.S. President Bill Clinton signs the Brady Bill at the
Mitt Romney is in high demand for appearances at GOP congressional campaign events. The grass is always greener, ain't it? In sad sort of way, at least. Reagan-era Press Secretary James Brady, of the Brady Handgun
Former White House press secretary James Brady, who survived a bullet wound to the head during the 1981 assassination attempt on President Reagan and went on to lead the gun-control campaign that bears his name, has died at age 73, his family said
Former White House press secretary James Brady, who survived a bullet wound to the head during the 1981 assassination attempt on President Reagan and went on to lead the gun-control campaign that bears his name, has died at age 73, his family said
A key advocate of gun control James Brady has passed away. He was 73 years old. A native of Centralia, Illinois, Brady was the White House Press Secretary when he was shot in 1981, while serving under former President