<p>Michael Christian, one of the two Australian radio presenters who made a prank call to the hospital where Indian-origin nurse Jacintha Saldanha committed suicide, has got a threatening message that said: "There are bullets with your name on".<br /><br /></p>.<p>Staff at the radio station behind the hoax call have been forced into safe houses, the Daily Mail reported.<br /><br />Managers at Southern Cross Austereo, the parent company of 2Day FM, have recruited bodyguards for their protection and police are investigating the death threats.<br /><br />One threat specifically targeted Christian, saying there are "bullets out there with your name on". Another threat involved a shotgun.<br /><br />The news.com.au website said 10 senior staff have now got personal protection costing $75,000 a week and 12 staff have been moved to hotels.<br />The threat against Christian reportedly originated from South Australia, and was delivered to the wrong address.<br /><br />The threats came after the 46-year-old Saldanha was found dead at the hospital staff quarters.<br /><br />Saldanha, a night sister, was the senior nurse on duty when she took a call from the two Australian radio jockeys, who were pretending to be Queen Elizabeth and Prince Charles.<br /><br />She unwittingly transferred the call to a colleague, who described in detail the condition of Kate, who was being treated for severe morning sickness.</p>
<p>Michael Christian, one of the two Australian radio presenters who made a prank call to the hospital where Indian-origin nurse Jacintha Saldanha committed suicide, has got a threatening message that said: "There are bullets with your name on".<br /><br /></p>.<p>Staff at the radio station behind the hoax call have been forced into safe houses, the Daily Mail reported.<br /><br />Managers at Southern Cross Austereo, the parent company of 2Day FM, have recruited bodyguards for their protection and police are investigating the death threats.<br /><br />One threat specifically targeted Christian, saying there are "bullets out there with your name on". Another threat involved a shotgun.<br /><br />The news.com.au website said 10 senior staff have now got personal protection costing $75,000 a week and 12 staff have been moved to hotels.<br />The threat against Christian reportedly originated from South Australia, and was delivered to the wrong address.<br /><br />The threats came after the 46-year-old Saldanha was found dead at the hospital staff quarters.<br /><br />Saldanha, a night sister, was the senior nurse on duty when she took a call from the two Australian radio jockeys, who were pretending to be Queen Elizabeth and Prince Charles.<br /><br />She unwittingly transferred the call to a colleague, who described in detail the condition of Kate, who was being treated for severe morning sickness.</p>