"I thought I'd give him a third shot for good luck," Navy SEAL Robert O'Neill told rapt 9/11 family members of the bullets he says he fired into bin Laden's skull.
He had been taught to fire two head shots -- the so-called double-tap.
Still, there was "no harm in putting one more bullet in him," O'Neill explained during a top-secret gathering at the 9/11 Museum in lower Manhattan in July, people who heard O'Neill speak told the New York Post.
"We didn't know what the mission was -- then we realised we're going after The Target," he said, referring to the al-Qaeda leader.
O'Neill said he had time for a phone call and rang up his children, thinking he might never see them again.
Once at bin Laden's hideout in Abbottabad, Pakistan, he climbed a stairway to a bedroom, and recalled the sound of his weapon firing: "Pop! Pop! Pop!"
"I thought I'd give him a third shot for good luck...Or good measure," a listener quoted him as saying.
The SEAL has faced heat from mission-mates who insist O'Neill was only one of three members whose rounds struck bin Laden.
But O'Neill says he does not care if people believe him.
The 9/11 victims' relatives had no idea they were about to hear a first-hand story of bin Laden's death when they accepted an e-mailed invitation to attend "a private and confidential" event in July.
The invitation from Representative Carolyn Maloney said only that a mystery speaker -- "a combat veteran who has played a pivotal role in international security that has affected all of your lives" -- would be on hand.
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