Dick Cheney on ‘one of the worst’ days of his life – when the vice president shot his friend
Former Vice President Dick Cheney spent all or part of four decades at the highest levels of the US government, but the one event he regretted the most happened nearly 1,500 miles from Washington.
Cheney, Texas quail hunting excursion on Feb. 11, 2006, riddling his buddy’s face, neck and torso with more than 100 shotgun pellets.
“You can’t blame anybody else,” Cheney told Fox News Channel in an interview four days after the shooting. “I’m the guy who pulled the trigger and shot my friend.”
The two-term VP added to interviewer Brit Hume that the shooting was “one of the worst days of my life at that moment.”
According to a contemporaneous account by Katharine Armstrong, whose family owned the ranch where the shooting occurred, Whittington had left the hunting group to retrieve a bird he had shot when Cheney suddenly turned and began shooting at another group of birds, putting Whittington in the line of fire.
“Mr. Whittington left the spot where he had been and came up behind the hunters, and was standing in a low spot of ground with the sun behind it,” said Armstrong, who insisted the VP was not at fault.
“I’ve been doing this all my life,” she said at the time. “Mr. Whittington failed to announce himself and say, ‘Hey, I’m behind you guys.'”

