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Congresswomen McKinney Debate

TnKrBeLlA012

<font color=red>I am so addicted to this board!!<b
Joined
Oct 19, 2002
Messages
1,123
I'm not sure if this topic has been talked about but I think this is so ridiculous. This women had no right to touch an officer. She should have identified herself when asked. This was set up for their protection. Who does she think she is? Race or being a women has nothing to do with it. Every time I see her and her lawyer on tv it really angers me. She was wrong and she knows it. She is hiding behind the race card to avoid possible charges. I think she needs to be held accountable for her actions. If I hit a police officer I bet I would be in alot of trouble or jail. Know one is above the law. Black, White, yellow,purple,ect.. If you can't abide by the laws you should be removed. To me this is just an embarrassment.
 
Now she has changed her tune! Guess she realized no one was falling for her previous claims.

McKinney Apologizes for Scuffle With Officer
Congresswoman May Face Prosecution for Incident
By MARK SHERMAN, AP

WASHINGTON (April 6) - Rep. Cynthia McKinney, D-Ga., expressed "sincere regret" Thursday for her altercation with a Capitol police officer, and offered an apology to the House.

"There should not have been any physical contact in this incident," McKinney said in brief remarks on the House floor. "I am sorry that this misunderstanding happened at all and I regret its escalation and I apologize."

McKinney's comments came after the case had been referred to a federal grand jury for possible prosecution.

She had previously insisted she had done nothing wrong, and accused police of "racial profiling." She is African-American and the police officer is white.

McKinney, 51, has a history of confrontations with officers.

In this case, she entered a House office building without passing through the metal detector that screens visitors. Members of Congress are permitted to bypass the machines, but she was not wearing the pin that identified her as a House member at the time.

The officer, whose name has not been made public, has said he asked McKinney three times to stop. She did not.

Terrance Gainer, outgoing chief of the Capitol police force, has said that the officer placed a hand on her and she responded by hitting him. He said McKinney's race was not a factor.

The incident has embarrassed Democrats, including fellow members of the Congressional Black Caucus, none of whom have publicly defended her behavior in the March 29 incident.

Rep. Mel Watt, the chairman of the Congressional Black Caucus, has had no statement on the incident. The caucus' silence stands in stark contrast to it's investigations of past scuffles between the U.S. Capitol Police and members.

One such probe occurred in 1990, when the caucus investigated whether Rep. Mickey Edwards, R-Okla., poked a black female Capitol Police officer and shouted curses at her, after she had denied entrance to an Edwards staffer who did not have House identification card with her.

A year later, the caucus investigated an incident in which a Capitol Police officer allegedly denied Rep. Louis Stokes, D-Ohio, entrance to the garage of the Rayburn House Office Building because the officer did not believe Stokes was a member.

McKinney's apology came after an eventful day in which two witnesses to the incident were subpoenaed by the grand jury and Gainer for the first time pubicly defended the officer involved. It was not clear which, if any, of her colleagues had urged McKinney to make the statement she did.

Republicans initially responded by advancing legislation to commend the Capitol police for their professionalism. Several GOP lawmakers sported pins expressing their support for the police.

It was unclear how much legal jeopardy McKinney confronted. A grand jury has subpoenaed two congressional aides who witnessed the confrontation.

Lisa Subrize, executive assistant to Rep. Thaddeus McCotter, R-Mich., and Troy Phillips, senior legislative assistant to Rep. Sam Farr, D-Calif., notified Speaker Dennis Hastert late Wednesday, as is customary under House procedure.

"After consultation with the Office of General Counsel, I have determined that compliance with the subpoena is consistent with the precedents and privileges of the House," both aides said in statements that a clerk read into the House record.

Bob Jackson, a spokesman for McCotter, said that Subrize witnessed the confrontation and immediately filled out a form for the Capitol Police, describing what she saw.

He and a spokeswoman for Farr declined further comment.

Former House Majority Leader Tom DeLay, who on Tuesday abandoned his re-election bid under a cloud of ethics charges, weighed in on Wednesday, saying McKinney "is a racist."

"She has a long history of racism," DeLay, R-Texas, said on Fox News Channel. "Everything is racism with her. This is incredible arrogance that sometimes hits these members of Congress, but especially Cynthia McKinney."

On Wednesday, McKinney had charged anew that racism is behind what she said is a pattern of difficulty in clearing Hill security checkpoints, arguing that officers assigned to protect Congress members should recognize her, even without her congressional pin.

"This has become much ado about hairdo," she said Wednesday on CBS' "The Early Show." McKinney recently dropped her trademark cornrows in favor loose curls.

The incident in a House office building has caused a commotion on Capitol Hill, where security in the era of terrorist threat is tighter than ever and where authorities had to order an evacuation just Monday because of a power outage. Capitol Police have turned the McKinney case over to U.S. Attorney Kenneth Wainstein.

Associated Press writers Dave Espo and Laurie Kellman contributed to this report.


4/6/2006 13:19:35


Copyright 2006 The Associated Press. The information contained in the AP news report may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or otherwise distributed without the prior written authority of The Associated Press. All active hyperlinks have been inserted by AOL.
 
I hope the officer gets a raise for doing his job right and she gets a stiff paycut!
 

I think she had every intention of having a confrontation and trying to play the race card. She radically changes her hairstyle (oh my gosh, that hair!)
then does not wear her id and does not acknowledge the officer when he tries to stop her! She should be ashamed and surely she has more important things going on as a congresswoman.
 
How on earth could these police officers know everyone on Capitol Hill?
I wouldn't be able to recognize all the rep. from our state.

ID should always be worn, no matter what...we are after all, suppose to be more secure.

I applaud that officer that did his job correctly!!

Lisa
 
Good for the officer. And if that was a makeover hairdo, she needs to get her money back.
Robin M.
 
She may apologize now--but it goes in her file of "see look at the history of what they have done to me".

I do think she looks better with her makeover--but she needs to remember--people get them as an inexpensive way to alter their diffrence and a little bit of makeup and hairspray can make one look very different.

I do think that they shoudl no longer be permitted to bypass security. Let them but in line--but EVERYONE should go through the metal detector as well as their stuff through the x-ray machine.

On our local fox last night--they played yet another interview. The interviewer asked the question about her hitting the officer over and over again. she just kept on talking abotu something related and did not acknowledge him at all. She is a big baby.
 


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