10-24-2008, 10:04 PM
Jminta
Joined on 11-03-2005
Posts 1,618
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The Black-on-White Crime that Wasn't
Police Say Volunteer Lied About
Attack
PITTSBURGH (Oct. 24) - A McCain
campaign volunteer made up a story of being robbed, pinned to the ground and
having the letter "B'' scratched on her face in what she had said was a
politically inspired attack, police said Friday.
Ashley Todd, 20-year-old
college student from College Station, Texas, admitted Friday that the story was
false, said Maurita Bryant, the assistant chief of the police department's
investigations division. Todd was charged with making a false report to police,
and Bryant said police doubted her story from the start.
Dressed in an orange hooded
sweat shirt, Todd left police headquarters in handcuffs late Friday and did not
respond to questions from reporters. The mark on her face was faded and her left
eye was slightly blackened when she arrived in district court.
Todd was awaiting arraignment
Friday on the misdemeanor false-report charge, which is punishable by up to two
years in prison. She will be housed in a mental health unit at the county jail
for her safety and because of "her not insignificant mental health issues,"
prosecutor Mark Tranquilli said.
Todd initially told
investigators she was attempting to use a bank branch ATM on Wednesday night
when a 6-foot-4 black man approached her from behind, put a knife blade to her
throat and demanded money. She told police she handed the assailant $60 and
walked away.
Todd, who is white, told
investigators she suspected the man then noticed a John McCain sticker on her
car. She said the man punched her in the back of the head, knocked her to the
ground and scratched a backward letter "B'' into her face with a dull
knife.
Police said Todd claimed the
man told her that he was going to "teach her a lesson" for supporting the
Republican presidential candidate, and that she was going to become a supporter
of Democratic candidate Barack Obama.
Todd told police she didn't
seek medical attention, but instead went to a friend's apartment nearby and
called police about 45 minutes later.
Todd could provide no
explanation for why she invented the story, police said. The woman told
investigators she believes she cut the "B'' onto her own cheek, but did not
provide an explanation of how or why and said she doesn't remember doing so,
police said.
Police said the woman reported
suffering from "mental problems" in the past, and that they do not believe
anyone put her up to the act.
Tranquilli said Todd will
remain jailed over the weekend pending a psychiatric evaluation, which won't
happen until Monday at the earliest.
The Associated Press could not
immediately locate Todd's family.
Bryant said somebody charged
with making a false report would typically be cited and sent a summons. But
because police have concerns about Todd's mental health, they are consulting
with the Allegheny County District Attorney.
Todd worked in New York for
the College Republican National Committee before moving two weeks ago to
Pennsylvania, where her duties included recruiting college students, the
committee's executive director, Ethan Eilon, has said.
"We are as upset as anyone to
learn of her deceit, Ashley must take full responsibility for her actions,"
College Republican National Committee spokeswoman Ashley Barbera said in a
statement.
Police reported Todd's claims
Thursday, as a photo of her injuries made it onto numerous blogs and news sites.
By Friday, police said they had found inconsistencies in Todd's story. They gave
her a lie-detector test, but wouldn't release the polygraph results.
Police interviewed Todd after
she contacted police Wednesday night and again on Thursday, Bryant said. They
asked her to come back Friday, ostensibly to help police put together a sketch
of the man. Instead, detectives began interviewing her.
"They just started talking to
her and she just opened up and said she wanted to tell the truth," Bryant
said.
Police suspected all along
that Todd might not be telling the truth, starting with the fact that the "B''
was backward, Bryant said.
"We have robbers here in
Pittsburgh, but they don't generally mutilate someone's face like that," Bryant
said. "They just take the money and run."
Copyright 2008 The Associated Press.
"All truth passes through three stages. First, it is ridiculed, second it is violently opposed, and third, it is accepted as self-evident." Arthur Schopenhauer, Philosopher (1788-1860)
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