As residents lined the streets here to bid a bittersweet farewell to Rep. Gabrielle Giffords, who was moved to a renowned rehabilitation hospital in Houston on Friday, she responded to their cheers with a smile and even tears, her doctor said.
“”She could hear it,”” said Dr. Randall Friese, a trauma surgeon who accompanied Giffords to Texas. “”She smiled, and then she actually teared up a little bit. It was very emotional, very heart wrenching.””
But so was the raw sentiment on the streets of Tucson Friday, an outpouring of reverence and respect that appeared to bind the battered city together 13 days after a gunman killed six people and wounded 13, including Giffords.
The Arizona Democrat, who was shot through the head, left her hometown with the kind of police motorcade and live TV coverage usually reserved for a head of state.
“”We just wanted to come today and say goodbye,”” said Dot Jones, 63, her eyes welling with tears as the procession passed. “”In some ways, I don’t think Tucson will ever get over it,”” said her husband, John, 63.
Friends, political supporters and a high school special education class clustered outside the hospital complex, waving American flags and flashing thumbs-up signs.
“”We love you Gabby!”” one woman cried.
Led by a dozen police motorcycles, an ambulance carrying Giffords left University Medical Center at 9:22 a.m. and drove to Davis-Monthan Air Force Base, where she was transferred onto an air ambulance for the flight to Houston.
In addition to Dr. Friese, Giffords’ husband, Mark Kelly, her mother, Gloria Giffords, an intensive care nurse and two congressional aides accompanied her.
After the flight landed, a Medivac helicopter ferried Giffords to the trauma center at TIRR Memorial Hermann hospital. Doctors there said that the transfer went “”flawlessly,”” and that Giffords would get her first rehabilitation session the same afternoon. “”She looks spectacular,”” said Dr. Dong Kim, neurosurgeon in chief, told a news conference. “”She looks awake, calm and comfortable.””
Dr. John Holcomb, who heads the medical team, said Giffords will remain in the intensive care unit at least until next week to ensure no infections develop. Doctors then will move her to the hospital’s Institute for Rehabilitation and Research, which specializes in treatment of brain injuries. Giffords has “”great rehabilitation potential,”” said Dr. Gerard Francisco.
“”She’ll keep us busy, and we’ll keep her busy as well.”” Kim said Giffords may require four to six months of speech and physical therapy, although some of it may be as an outpatient.
U.S. Capitol Police have set up extra security at the 119-bed hospital. Giffords, 40, was shot in the forehead when a gunman opened fire on a crowd that had gathered to meet her outside a Tucson supermarket on Jan. 8.
A federal grand jury has charged Jared Lee Loughner, 22, with attempted assassination, among other charges. He will be arraigned in Phoenix on Monday. On Friday morning, Tucson police blocked traffic at each intersection so Giffords’ motorcade could pass, and throngs of well-wishers waited on nearly every corner.
Some cheered, some wept, and some prayed.
“”It’s the end of a chapter for us,”” said Rick Morey-Wolfe, 37, a hospital contractor. “”It’s sad to see her go — this is her town. But we’re happy to see her go somewhere where she can get better.””
Cindy Harrelson, a grandmother of three, leaned on her walker as the motorcade assembled. She said she’s had a tumor in the same region of the brain where Giffords was shot.
“”I know what she has to go through, mentally and physically,”” said Harrelson. “”I’m glad she’s going someplace that’s better for her and her husband.””
On Campbell Avenue, Emily Joseph, 22, clutched a sign reading, “”Tucson’s heart goes with you. Come home soon, come home strong.”” “”I want her to know we’re still pulling for her,”” Joseph explained.
A small group stayed outside the air force base even after security guards had waved the motorcade through the gate. Carlos Gonzales, 61, dressed in a U.S. flag shirt, cried when the procession passed. He had skipped work as a marketing director for the day, and he held a sign, reading “”God Speed Gabby,”” high in the air until Giffords’ plane had disappeared from sight. “”Tucson has come together like I’ve never seen before,”” he said. “”This tragedy has surpassed everything. It has surpassed politics, religion, race.””
Tucson residents like to boast that, despite pushing 1 million in population, their sometimes eccentric community has only one freeway and retains a small-town feel. On the streets Friday morning, it seemed that everyone knew Giffords, either directly or as a symbol of the tragedy.
“”This woman is different than any other person I’ve seen in politics,”” said Al Garcia, 47, who wore a Marine Corps jacket. “”The first time we met her, it was like we’d known her forever.”” Michael Young, 61, clutched an old Giffords campaign poster.
“”She’s a genuinely nice person,”” he said. “”I’m glad she’s doing so well. I’m a little sorry she’s leaving us”” his voice quivered “”but I understand.””
Rana McGoldrick, 40, has known Giffords since high school. She brought her toddlers, Brennan and Declan, to see her friend off.
“”It’s bittersweet,”” McGoldrick said. “”She’s leaving Tucson, her home. But we know she’ll be back.””
Dave Sanderson, 50, voted for Giffords’ Republican opponent in November’s election. But since the shooting, he’s walked his two pit bulls every day to see the growing mound of flowers, candles and cards that well-wishers have left for Giffords and the other victims outside the hospital.
“”This tore me up,”” he said of the massacre. As Giffords’ motorcade approached, Sanderson put a pair of sunglasses on one of his dogs, Buzz, and stuck a U.S. flag in the dog’s collar. “”We thought we’d give her a Tucson send-off,”” he said.