Following the lead of his media cheering section, Slick Barry Obama last night blasted Governor Palin for standing silent when somebody at one of her rallies responded to a mention of “Obama” by shouting “Kill him!” That outcry was the factual grain of sand around which the Obama Nation fashioned a new anti-McCain/Palin narrative: Republicans are inciting hatred! Civil rights leader John Lewis, whom John McCain praised at the Saddleback Church debate, put the Republican standard bearers in the same league as George Wallace.
That Governor Palin didn’t arrive until after the epithet was hurled – that fact was barely noticed, certainly not by Slick Barry. Nor were his acolytes going to listen to the lame excuse that a single nut doesn’t typify tens of millions of McCain supporters. Guilt by association has long been a bedrock of liberal polemics (applied in only one direction, of course).
Now we learn that McCain/Palin have one further excuse that maybe can’t be called lame: The incident didn’t happen. The Secret Service, which takes seriously any threat, however remote, against a Presidential candidate, investigated and could find no one who heard “Kill him!” other than the reporter who wrote about it. A local newspaper, the Scranton Times-Leader posted an exposé on its Web site yesterday:
Agent Bill Slavoski said he was in the audience, along with an undisclosed number of additional secret service agents and other law enforcement officers and not one heard the comment.
“I was baffled,” he said after reading the report in Wednesday’s Times-Tribune.
He said the agency conducted an investigation Wednesday, after seeing the story, and could not find one person to corroborate the allegation other than Singleton [the reporter who filed the story].
Slavoski said more than 20 non-security agents were interviewed Wednesday, from news media to ordinary citizens in attendance at the rally for the Republican vice presidential candidate held at the Riverfront Sports Complex. He said Singleton was the only one to say he heard someone yell “kill him.”
“We have yet to find someone to back up the story,” Slavoski said. “We had people all over and we have yet to find anyone who said they heard it.”
The time of the Times-Leader’s post isn’t recorded, but the first reader comment on it is time-stamped 4:42 p.m., about four hours before last night’s Presidential debate. Given the explosive way in which Senator Obama used this anecdote, shouldn’t his campaign have done a little due diligence,
Of course, we’re still waiting for Dan Rather’s apology.
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