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Violent threats hit Obama allies over health vote

Last Updated 25 March 2010, 05:07 IST
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Democratic House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer said more than 10 Democratic lawmakers had reported incidents since Sunday's vote, some of which he described as "very serious" without giving details.

Lawmakers stepped up their security, as one senior Democrat reported bricks had been thrown through the windows of her home district office.Democratic Representative Bart Stupak, who brokered a deal clearing the way for some fellow anti-abortion lawmakers to vote for the legislation, received a fax with a noose and the caption "all Baby Killers come to unseemly ends Either by the hand of man or by the Hand of God."

The abusive tone of some of the threats as well as incidents of violence have clearly shaken lawmakers as they prepare to head home this weekend for a spring recess.
The Federal Bureau of Investigation was investigating a reported incident of a gas line being cut at the home of one lawmaker's brother, and the US Capitol Police was briefing worried representatives on how to keep themselves and their families safe.

"We received information that the congressman may have been threatened and that was the reason for us going to his brother's house, because it was related to us that he may have been targeted," the FBI said.

"Any member who feels themself at risk is getting attention from the proper authorities," said Hoyer. "That activity ought to be unacceptable in our democracy."House Rules Committee chairman Louise Slaughter said in a statement that someone threw a brick through the window of her district office and "a voicemail referencing snipers" was left on her campaign office phone system.

"'Assassinate' is the word they used... toward the children of lawmakers who voted yes," reported a Rochester television news outlet of the message left for the New York lawmaker.

"The US Capitol Police, the FBI and local police departments are all aware of these incidents and are still investigating," she said in a statement.The incidents occurred after demonstrators demanding lawmakers "kill the bill" reportedly spat on one black representative and called others racial slurs just outside the Capitol over the weekend.
Republican House Minority Leader John Boehner said many Americans were "angry" about the health law, but underlined that "violence and threats are unacceptable. That's not the American way."

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(Published 25 March 2010, 05:01 IST)

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