truesee's Blog

Handcuffed prisoner opens police car and escapes

Search continues for handcuffed man who escaped from police car

Ridgh Genesis Achille, 19, had just been arrested on a charge of shoplifting a pair of sunglasses from Altamonte Mall.

Ridgh Achille

Ridgh Achille, 19, escaped from the back of a police car as he was being transported to the SEminole County Jail. (Seminole County Sheriff's Office / July 17, 2010)

 

 

 



Susan Jacobson,

Orlando Sentinel 7:09 p.m. EDT, July 17, 2010

Law enforcement officers have called off the dogs and the helicopter, but they continue to search for a man who escaped from a police car Friday evening as he was being transported to jail.

A handcuffed Ridgh Genesis Achille, 19, escaped from the car after telling the officer behind the wheel that he was claustrophobic and couldn't breathe, Altamonte Springs police said. It's not uncommon for the air to get stuffy in the back of a patrol car, they said.

Achille had been arrested on a shoplifting charge at the Altamonte Mall about 8 p.m. and was being taken to the Seminole County Jail when the officer opened the window slightly, Altamonte Springs Lt. Derrick Becton said.

Somehow, the prisoner opened the door from the outside and ran off at County Home Road, near Flea World and the jail in Sanford 

Seminole County deputies and Altamonte Springs police officers, aided by dogs and a helicopter, looked in vain for Achille into Saturday morning. He will be rearrested on an escape charge, Becton said.

Achille was caught on the outskirts of the mall after he stole a pair of sunglasses from Solstice Sunglass Boutique, police said. There also is a warrant for his arrest out of Orange County on a burglary charge, they said.

Achille is awaiting trial on 2009 Orange County charges of burglary of a dwelling, theft and resisting arrest, court records show. In January, he pleaded no contest to resisting arrest in Orange County after initially being charged with aggravated battery on a pregnant woman, witness tampering, false imprisonment and resisting arrest.

When he escaped, Achille was wearing a blue plaid or checked shirt with tight black jeans and tennis shoes. He is black, has a shaved head and a goatee, Becton said.
Entry #2,729

Sarah Palin Puts Stamp on G.O.P. Primaries

July 17, 2010

Palin Puts Stamp on G.O.P. Primaries

 

 

JEFF ZELENY 

NY TIMES

 

LAWRENCEVILLE, Ga. — The latest candidate to win the most coveted Republican prize of the election year stood on the steps of a gazebo here and reminded voters of a new reason to support her in the crowded race for Georgia governor. 

“Sarah Palin has come on board,” the candidate, Karen Handel, told a group of supporters who gathered Friday on the grounds of the Gwinnett Historic Courthouse. As they broke into applause, she added: “It means one thing. We’re winning.” 

Last week, Ms. Handel became at least the 50th candidate to win the Palin seal of approval. Through a breezy 194 words posted on Ms. Palin’s Facebook page — calling Ms. Handel a “pro-life, pro-Constitutionalist with a can-do attitude” — a four-way Republican primary came alive, the latest in a number of races across the country that have been influenced by Ms. Palin. 

One year after leaving public office behind, defiantly stepping down as governor of Alaska to become a best-selling author and a television celebrity, Ms. Palin has waded deeply back into electoral politics, and she plans to increase her visibility on the campaign trail after Labor Day. 

That she is leaving a major footprint on the 2010 midterm elections is not disputed, but less clear is whether the endorsements are rooted in an effort to amplify her image or to create a political strategy for the future. 

When her organization, SarahPAC, filed its quarterly financial report last week, it prompted renewed speculation about her political ambitions for 2012. She raised $866,000 and donated $87,500 to Republican candidates — the biggest tallies in both categories since she opened the political action committee last year, but hardly exceptional for a prospective presidential candidate. 

After parting ways with Senator John McCain following the 2008 presidential race, Ms. Palin did not receive the list of campaign donors she had helped build, so her aides have been creating her own roster, a critical ingredient to a future political bid. More than half of her contributions have come from California, Florida, New York, Tennessee and Texas, but she received donations from all 50 states. 

She has extended many of her endorsements to women, whom she refers to as “Mama Grizzlies.” (One exception is Senator Lisa Murkowski of Alaska, whose male opponent Ms. Palin endorsed.) But some of her decisions have been met with resistance from social conservatives who argue that her selections are guided by politics over principle. 

In Iowa, conservative Christians criticized her for passing over their candidate in favor of a former governor, Terry Branstad. 

And the biggest furor so far has erupted here, with a leader of an anti-abortion group, Georgia Right to Life, accusing Ms. Palin of “endorsing any female Republican candidate that she could find.” Rival candidates complained that Ms. Palin was backing the most liberal Republican in the race. 

Ms. Handel, a former Georgia secretary of state, dismissed the matter as petty politics on Friday as her bus tour passed through Lawrenceville, about 30 miles east of Atlanta. She said her fellow Republicans “would be equally as thrilled to have Sarah Palin’s endorsement as I have been.” 

But worried about the fallout in the days leading up to the primary on Tuesday, she turned to Ms. Palin for validation.

“The primary is really close, so Karen’s opponents are kind of saying those crazy things about her,” Ms. Palin said in a phone message to thousands of Georgia voters. “Please just get the truth for yourself.” 

Ms. Palin has offered her long-distance support to Ms. Handel and other candidates, but her campaign appearances have been rare. She has delivered a few policy addresses in recent months and seemed to be moving beyond the family drama that often enveloped her. 

That changed last week, when her daughter Bristol announced on the cover of Us Weekly that she was engaged to her former boyfriend, Levi Johnston, stirring a reminder of the circus-like atmosphere that accompanied the Palins’ arrival on the national scene two years ago. 

Ms. Palin devotes the majority of her time to her own projects, including appearances as a commentator on Fox News and work on a second book, “America by Heart: Reflections on Family, Faith and Flag,” to be released in November. She is in a position to exert tremendous influence at the grass-roots level without engaging in the give and take of regular campaigning or relinquishing her earning power. 

Still, Republican candidates across the country continue to clamor for her support, even if it is unlikely that she will ever arrive in their districts for a rally. 

Like other national political figures, Ms. Palin has been supporting candidates all year, a mix of Tea Party enthusiasts like Rand Paul of Kentucky and establishment Republicans. But her endorsements did not gain much notice until she weighed in on the South Carolina governor’s race, helping to vault Nikki Haley from the bottom rung of candidates to the winner of the Republican nomination last month. 

For most candidates, Palin endorsements arrive as if they are a gift from a secret Santa, with words of support suddenly popping up on Facebook without notice. She reached a New York Congressional candidate, Ann Marie Buerkle, at home last week, telling her that an endorsement had been posted online. 

“She was just lovely,” recalled Ms. Buerkle, whose race has been ignored by party leaders. “She made us legitimate.” 

When Ms. Palin announced her backing of Mary Fallin in the Oklahoma governor’s contest, the other Republican in the race testily denounced the endorsement. That candidate, Randy Brogdon, declared, “Stop acting like you are owed the governor’s mansion, and stop hiding behind the skirt of Sarah Palin.” 

Ms. Fallin, a two-term member of Congress who would be the first woman to be governor of Oklahoma, dismissed the criticism from her opponent as sexist. 

“Sarah is at the top of my list to receive an endorsement from,” Ms. Fallin said in an interview. “Even a lot of Democrats and independents admire her spunk and her willingness to stand up for what she believes and say what’s on her mind.” 

While the endorsements often land as a surprise — in Iowa, Mr. Branstad did not get the word until Ms. Palin called his campaign headquarters — increasingly the decisions are less spontaneous than they may appear. 

Her choices in governors’ races have hewed closely to preferred candidates of the Republican Governors Association, including in Iowa, where the presidential race begins. And after a long stretch in which most Republican operatives had no idea how to reach Ms. Palin, a formal structure has taken shape and a researcher on her staff reviews information candidates provide in a quest to earn her support. 

“SarahPAC is trying to be in a position to have the resources for the governor to do whatever she wants between now and November 2010,” said Tim Crawford, treasurer of the committee. 

Fred Malek, a Republican fund-raiser who is a friend and supporter of Ms. Palin, said it would be incorrect to view her role in the midterm elections through the prism of the 2012 presidential race. 

Mr. Malek said she does not seek his counsel — nor that of any other Republican establishment figure — in deciding whether to support a candidate. “She carefully watches what’s going on in the political world and makes decisions based on who she thinks deserves support,” he said. 

Indeed, the endorsements provide little evidence that she is moving closer to a presidential run. A willingness to inject herself into so many primary fights and frustrate the supporters of the candidates she overlooks is a risky way of building establishment support.

In conversations with Republicans in recent months — including at a rally Ms. Palin held with Mr. McCain in Arizona, at the Southern Republican Leadership Conference in New Orleans and at campaign events here in Georgia — voters often give Ms. Palin high marks. But asked whether they believe she should run for president, few say yes. 

Judy Pruitt, a 70-year-old retiree in Lawrenceville, said she came to see Ms. Handel partly because of the Palin endorsement. But she had a swift answer when asked if she would welcome a 2012 Palin campaign. 

“I’m not sure she’s ready for the presidency,” she said. “I do like listening to her, and I respect her views on things. But I think she can have more of an impact if she’s not running. I really do.” 

 

Derek Willis contributed research. 

Entry #2,728

Obama: Hold me accountable for high unemployment

Obama: Hold me accountable for high unemployment

 

Jordan Fabian
The Hill
07/16/10 11:05 AM ET
 

President Obama said in an interview Friday that voters should hold him accountable for the struggling economy, but that his policies are restoring it to health. 

Obama welcomed voters to judge his administration’s work on the economy as the November midterm elections approach. The economy and jobs consistently poll as the number one issue for voters. 

“If somebody’s out of work right now, the only answer that I’m going to have for them is when they get a job. Up until that point, from their perspective, the economic policies aren’t working well enough,” he said in an interview with NBC News. “That’s my job — as president — is to take responsibility for moving us in the right direction.” 

Though polls show that the voters are worried about the state of the economy and high unemployment, Obama used the interview to express confidence about his policies and contrast them with Republican ideas. 

Obama said he is responsible for instilling the recovery, but stressed that policies enacted by previous GOP-controlled Republicans and former President George W. Bush left the economy in a recession.

“What I’m absolutely convinced of is that we’re going to have a choice, not just in November but for years to come,” he said. “We can go back to all the same policies that got us into this mess, where we basically provide special interest loopholes, we don’t regulate Wall Street, we have a healthcare system that’s out of control, we provide tax cuts to folks who don’t need them and weren’t asking for them.”

Democrats are stepping up efforts to draw a sharp contrast between themselves and the Republicans as they head into a challengeing election. White House press secretary Robert Gibbs stirred up his own party this week when he acknowledged a GOP takeover of Congress was possible.

Asked about Gibbs’s comments, Obama said: “This is going to be a choice between the policies that got us into this mess and my policies that are getting us out of this mess.”

House Minority Leader John Boehner (R-Ohio) responded on Twitter "POTUS on NBC News: 'I expect to be held accountable on jobs'; Where are the jobs?"

With unemployment still hovering at 9.5 percent, Obama said he would not be surprised if there is a backlash at the polls.

“What I’m prepared is to be held accountable for the policies that I put in place. But Americans don’t have selective memory here. They’re going to remember the policies that got us into this mess, as well. And they sure as heck don’t want to go back to those.”

Entry #2,727

Police wins week off for time he spends dressing

Cop wins week off work for time spent dressing

German police officer says he lost 15 minutes a day putting on his uniform

 
MSNBC
updated 7/14/2010 11:59:34 AM ET
A police officer in Germany has won an extra week off work every year because of the 15 minutes it takes him to dress for duty each day, according to news reports.

Martin Schauder, 44, worked out how long he spent putting on his undershirt, overshirt, trousers, belt, handcuffs, weapon and gas canister, tunic, boots, protective kneepads — when on riot control — hat and gloves, the U.K.'s Daily Telegraph reported. 

The officer, who joined the force at 16, is said to have argued with his superior officers for a number of months, asking for time off or a pay increase to compensate him for 45 hours spent dressing each year. 

They refused, but he won the argument when he took his case to an administrative court in Munster, north-west Germany, the Telegraph said. 

The U.K.'s Guardian newspaper, citing Germany's Münstersche Zeitung, said Schauder told the court: "If my shift starts at 1 p.m., say, I'm expected to be completely fitted out by then, including my pistol, handcuffs and reserve weapon, otherwise I face being cautioned." 

Test case for hundreds
His case was was a test complaint for more than 120 police officers in Munster and a further 1,000 in North Rhine-Westphalia, the Guardian said, but Schauder's employers will be able to appeal to a higher court. 

The Guardian said it was unclear whether Schauder would receive back payment for his 28 years in the force or a holiday of six months.

 

Entry #2,726

Two men injured arguing over frying pan

Third-degree burns, stitches for South Bend brothers-in-law fighting over frying pan

Tribune Staff Report

2:19 p.m. Saturday, July 10, 2010

Updated Friday, July 16, 2010

SOUTH BEND — A dispute over the ownership of a frying pan led to third-degree burns for one South Bend man and 11 stitches for another, police reports said.

A 49-year-old man was cooking bacon on the stove at a house in the 600 block of Lincoln Way East when his 47-year-old brother-in-law claimed the pan was his, the report said.

The argument led to the man cooking cornering the younger man into a closet and spilling hot grease on the younger man. The report said the 47-year-old then grabbed the pan from his attacker and hit him in the head twice.

The 49-year-old was taken to an area hospital were he received 11 stitches before being arrested for assault, the report said. But the man who received third-degree burns on his hands told police he did not wish to press charges.
Police did report finding two pieces of bacon in the closet.

Entry #2,723

Robber caught after car runs out of gas

Bad Luck Bandit’ runs out of gas

 

Dee Riggs
World staff writer

 

Thursday, July 15, 2010

 

WENATCHEE — It helps to have a full tank of gas when driving away from the scene of a crime, a Tacoma man discovered Wednesday afternoon.

The man, dubbed by Wenatchee police as the Bad Luck Bandit, ran out of gas as he was leaving a store where Native American collectibles were stolen. 

Police, who had been alerted to the thefts by the store owner, arrested the 47-year-old suspect after he fled on foot from his car, which stalled 50 feet from its original parking spot, said Sgt. John Kruse, a Wenatchee Police Department spokesman.

The incident happened about 3:45 p.m. Wednesday in the 800 block of South Wenatchee Avenue, Kruse said. The man is suspected of stealing several Native American collectibles, which were on display at the Discount Center, 807 S. Wenatchee Ave. 

At the time of his arrest, the man also was in possession of several necklaces that were stolen from the Antique Mall in downtown Wenatchee, Kruse said. He also is suspected of stealing a beaded Native American ceremonial garment with a price tag on it for $10,500. Kruse said officers do not know where that garment came from. 

Anyone with information about the suspect or items he may have in his possession is asked to contact Detective Jeff Ward at the Wenatchee Police Department, 888-4210. 

The man was booked into the Chelan County Regional Justice Center on suspicion of first-degree theft.

Entry #2,722

Man uses fake money to post bail

Camden man accused of using fake money to post bail in Burlington County

 

JIM WALSH

Courier-Post Staff

July 15, 2010

 

CINNAMINSON — Police here didn't have to look far for a man accused of posting bail with counterfeit cash.

They say the suspect, 25-year-old Ronald T. White of Camden, returned on his own to the police station -- and asked for some of his money back.

"You can't teach stupid," Cinnaminson Police Det. Sgt. William Covert said of White, whose bail payment five days earlier had been inflated by a paperwork error. "He walks in the door looking for his money and we lock him up." 

White, who allegedly used five phony $20 bills to help pay $400 in bail on July 7, had two bogus $20 bills in his possession when he came to the station on Monday, Covert said. 

The two bills shared a serial number and matched at least one of the $20s used to make bail, he said. 

White's problems in Cinnaminson began with his July 7 arrest on multiple counts of shoplifting. White, accused of taking items from a Burlington Coat Factory and a Shop-Rite supermarket on Route 130, "actually had almost $900 in his pocket," Covert said. 

White received a summons for the shoplifting charges, but he had to pay $400 bail for two outstanding warrants from Camden, Covert said. 

Authorities realized the next day that the $20s were fakes printed on the wrong paper stock. Cinnaminson police then issued a warrant charging White with forgery. 

Meanwhile, Covert said, White apparently learned at a court appearance that he had been sought on only one warrant in Camden, with a bail requirement of $200. The second warrant, also with $200 bail, had been listed in error. 

"He said, "I want my $200 back,' " Covert said. 

Instead, White received a trip to Burlington County Jail, where he was held Wednesday on $5,000 cash bail.

Entry #2,721

Huge sandwich locks man's jaw

Too much Sandwich more than man could chew

 

 

Christopher Quinn
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

3:36 p.m. Friday, July 16, 2010

 

"When this is all over, it's going to be funny," Paul Addison predicted to his best friend, Chad Ettmueller, who one night last February lay pumped full of morphine in an Atlanta emergency room. Quantcast

Chris Dunn, cdunn@ajc.com Chad Ettmueller of Cumming takes a bite out of the double meat wicked sandwich at the Which Wich sandwich shop in Cumming on Monday, July 12, 2010. Ettmueller ordered that sandwich in March, dislocated both joints of his jaw while taking the first bite and paid about $4,000 out of pocket for the medical services needed to correct his jaw.

Ettmueller responded with mouth agape. He could not do otherwise. He had dislocated his jaw at maximum stretch when he tried to bite into a Which Wich sandwich shop's Double Wicked, a glorious pile of double portions of beef, bacon, turkey, ham, pepperoni, three cheeses and a wad of fixings on a whole wheat bun.

For 14 aching hours on that cold Saturday night, Ettmueller sat with his mouth stuck open, wide enough for a sparrow to check it out for a nesting site. 

As Jay Leno said while noting a news item about Ettmueller, "If the sandwich doesn't fit in your mouth, you've got too much sandwich." 

It has been an interesting five months. Ettmueller's discomfiting pose earned him Internet fame and the cross-county sympathy of Which Wich fans, who in a company-sponsored contest concluded June 23 voted the sandwich a new name. The Lockjaw.

That night in the Cumming Which Wich with his jaw jacked open, Ettmueller looked perplexedly at wife Carolyn and kids Conner, Kenna and Maddie and said as best he could that his mouth was stuck. 

Yup. OK, Dad. Whatever. Their responses had been conditioned by years of their father's joking. 

He walked outside. He manipulated the formerly cooperative body part with his hands. No luck. He was hitting himself in the chin in an unsuccessful effort to shut his mouth when Carolyn realized this was no laughing matter, though some emergency room workers would later disagree. 

She was a little freaked out, Carolyn admitted, but she was not crying. Not yet. The tears would come after they hurriedly wrapped the sandwiches and left for a visit to a nearby clinic. 

Ettmueller said, "They actually laughed at me," when he walked in gaping and Carolyn explained. 

The doctor failed to fix him. So the Ettmuellers headed to the first of two more emergency rooms they would visit that night. A half-day and $3,000 later for the insurance co-pays, deductibles and MRI's, Ettmueller awoke from the anesthesia with a closed mouth, sore muscles and a tight, chin-to-crown head wrap that stayed on for four days. 

It was, he said, "the most expensive sandwich that I never ate." 

Carolyn, a bit punchy from the night, dashed off an e-mail to Which Wich, telling the story and suggesting her beleaguered husband deserved a new sandwich since he did not get to eat his. 

Gary Birnberg, the Cumming Which Wich franchisee, saw it and thought: Is this for real? 

He discovered it was and, somewhat disturbingly, Ettmueller worked for a company that structures large lawsuit settlements. 

Phone calls between Binberg, the Ettmuellers and Jeff Sinelli, the CEO of the Dallas-based chain, eased the businessmen's concerns about Ettmueller practicing his craft upon them. 

Sinelli decided to try to spin Internet gold out of the bad situation. He flew to Atlanta and with Ettmueller's cooperation oversaw the making of YouTube videos about the incident.

LINK TO YOUTUBE VIDEO

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6Fjt6bNk6As

As the story spread, Ettmueller's name popped up in media from Forsyth County newspapers to the BBC in England. He fielded calls from radio stations around the country. 

He has since pondered buying a Which Wich franchise and has also gingerly eaten a few Lockjaws since the incident. But he hung on to the coupon Binberg gave him to replace the original. 

And whatever did happen to the original? 

Addison, who had been called in for moral support that painful night, left the emergency room hungry. He knew that somewhere in the parking deck, the never-bitten sandwich sat in the Ettmuellers' minivan, he said. When he found the minivan and its doors were open, it was like a green light.

"It was delicious," Addison said, noting that he acted in the best interest of his friend. 

"It was a mercy killing, only tastier," he said.

 

LINK TO PHOTO

http://www.ajc.com/news/too-much-sandwich-more-572146.html

Entry #2,720

Man tries to shoplift tweezers lands in jail

Man tries to shoplift tweezers, lands in jail

Stacey Mulick
July 13, 2010 at 9:05 am Bookmark and Share 

 

A 48-year-old man is facing theft and assault charges over an $8 pair of tweezers even he admitted he didn't need. 

The charges stem from an incident Friday at a pharmacy in Gig Harbor.

According to charging documents, Troy J. Montgomery went into the store, selected a pair of tweezers and put them in his pocket. A store employee spotted the activity, confronted Montgomery and told him she was calling police. 

Montgomery took the tweezers from his pocket, threw them and headed for the door, court documents state. 

The store's pharmacist stepped into Montgomery's path to stop him and was shoved aside. The pharmacist fell to the floor and suffered a 3-inch cut to his arm, court documents state. 

Shoppers took Montgomery to the ground and detained him until Pierce County sheriff's deputies arrived. 

A deputy asked Montgomery if he wanted to answer questions about what happened.

"Not really," he replied, according to charging documents. "Besides being stupid, don't even need the thing, about the dumbest thing I ever did." 

Pierce County prosecutors have charged Montgomery with third-degree assault and third-degree theft.

Read more: http://blog.thenewstribune.com/crime/2010/07/13/man-tries-to-shoplift-tweezers-lands-in-jail/#ixzz0tsT5rzmD

Entry #2,719

Woman lied about being carjacked and having sex to cover up...

www.thedailyjournal.com

July 16, 2010

Authorities: Woman lied about sex in SUV to hide laptop theft

ALEX HARCHAREK

The Daily Journal
Staff Writer

 

VINELAND -- The real story behind what happened to a Vineland woman who made up a tale about being carjacked, and then told police she was having sex with a driver when their SUV crashed, took another strange twist, authorities said Thursday.

Turns out both accounts were nothing but lies designed to cover up her role in the theft of a laptop computer that led to stealing a car and committing arson, authorities said.

The woman, 23-year-old Sara C. Blasse of Galli Drive, initially told Vineland police she broke her arm in a confrontation with an armed carjacker in Chesilhurst early Saturday morning, authorities said. Officers found her wrecked SUV abandoned on a residential street in the Camden County town, smoldering from an apparent arson.

But police said they weren't fooled by inconsistencies in her account of the carjacking, which prompted Blasse to change her story and say a male prostitute crashed her car while she gave him oral sex.

That story wasn't true either, the Camden County Prosecutor's Office announced Thursday.

Further investigation revealed Blasse and her boyfriend, 27-year-old Newtonville resident Henry Goode Jr., stole a laptop from a vehicle on Miller Street in Chesilhurst, the Prosecutor's Office said. The computer's owner witnessed the theft and called police.

The couple evaded police, but soon crashed Blasse's 2003 Kia Sorento at Atlantic and Sherman avenues in Chesilhurst, breaking Blasse's arm in the process, Prosecutor's Office spokesman Jason Laughlin said.

Blasse and Goode then stuffed paper towels into the SUV's gas tank and attempted to set it on fire but failed, Laughlin said. The couple fled in opposite directions, he said.

Goode's brother took Blasse to South Jersey Healthcare Regional Medical Center, where she told police her first of two phony explanations, authorities said.

While Blasse was at the hospital, Goode stole a van from a South Jersey Gas facility in Winslow, police said. He drove south to Atlantic County, where he abandoned the vehicle in Buena Vista -- but not before attempting, and failing, to ignite the vehicle's gas tank, the Prosecutor's Office said.

Goode then fled to his home on the 400 block of 10th Street, where he was arrested Wednesday, police said.

Blasse is charged with aggravated arson, burglary, theft, hindering apprehension by destroying evidence and filing a false report. She was released on bail Thursday.

Goode was charged with aggravated arson, burglary, theft and hindering apprehension. He was being held at Camden County Jail.

Entry #2,717

RNC Michael Steele rebukes top Democrats for personal attacks

Steele fires back at Democrats' sniping

Some liberals defend him, too

 

8:21 p.m.

Thursday, July 15, 2010

Washington Times

 

 

Republican National Committee Chairman Michael S. Steele rebuked top Democratic spokesmen Thursday for personal attacks that go beyond the pale, including suggestions that Senate candidate Sharron Angle wants her political opponents to die and that he is rooting for U.S. defeat in Afghanistan.

He also is getting unexpected help on the latter count from commentators normally aligned with the liberal wing of the Democratic Party.

Democratic National Committee spokesman Hari Sevugan this week said, in a reference to old health care debates, that Mrs. Angle wishes death on her opponents.

Mrs. Angle, a Nevada Republican backed by Sarah Palin and a "tea party" favorite, leads her Democratic rival, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, in the polls.

During the fight over the health care bill, Mrs. Palin and some other Republicans predicted that the bill would result in "death panels" that would ration resources and decide which ill patients would or would not get expensive lifesaving treatments. Democrats denounced the claims.

"While 'death panels' were nowhere to be found in his health insurance reform bill, it looks like Sarah Palin can find a one-woman version of one in Nevada where Sharron Angle thinks people who criticize her political positions should die," Mr. Sevugan said. "Her sentiments are sick, but that fact that Republicans endorse, as their standard-bearer in Nevada, someone who wishes death upon her critics and calls for 'Second Amendment remedies' to deal with her political opposition is just as disturbing."

In an e-mail to The Washington Times on Thursday, Mr. Steele denounced the attack. 

"In politics, tough talk comes with the territory. But there is a line that should not be crossed. Making personal attacks - and claiming any candidate wants their opponents to die - is not just over the line, it denies basic human dignity," Mr. Steele said.

The jagged-edged comments began last week when Democratic National Committee spokesman Brad Woodhouse accused Mr. Steele of acts verging on treason - and supposedly "betting against our troops and rooting for failure in Afghanistan." 

Just before the July Fourth holiday, Mr. Steele created a political furor by telling donors at a Connecticut fundraiser that history shows that a land war in Afghanistan is a fool's errand and calling it President Obama's war. 

Last week, Washington Post columnist E.J. Dionne, who describes himself as a political liberal, called Mr. Woodhouse's exaggerated rhetoric dangerous. 

"I have some empathy for Woodhouse, who must be weary of dealing with the other side's demagoguery day after day," Mr. Dionne wrote in his regular column. "But this is dangerous stuff in a democracy and particularly perilous from a party that, less than two years ago, rightly insisted it could oppose the Bush administration's foreign policy on thoroughly patriotic grounds." 

Some Democrats also saw more than a hint of hypocrisy in the Woodhouse attack on Mr. Steele coming after a vote by a majority of House Democrats to require that Mr. Obama present a plan by April to get U.S. troops out of Afghanistan. 

Salon columnist Glenn Greenwald, long a fierce critic of the Bush administration, called Mr. Woodhouse's statement "truly repellent" and compared the DNC's tactics to those of former chief Bush political strategist Karl Rove and called them "poisonous" and "manipulative." 

Mr. Greenwald, whose column on the subject also chastised Mr. Steele for not noting that Afghanistan was invaded under a Republican administration, also called out other liberals for similarly "replicating the worst of the GOP rhetoric." 

"Over on the front page of Daily Kos, Barbara Morrill ends her post about Steele's comments this way: 'What the family and friends of those who died or those who are still fighting there today think is, of course, another story.' A couple of months ago, Jonathan Alter and Keith Olbermann both suggested that criticisms of Obama weaken the U.S. and thus help Al Qaeda. Last October, both the DNC and some progressive groups accused Steele respectively of 'siding with the terrorists' and being 'downright unpatriotic' because he questioned whether Obama's Nobel Peace Prize was merited," Mr. Greenwald wrote. 

Mr. Woodhouse also suggested that Mr. Steele was being two-faced in giving a cold shoulder to Democratic National Committee Chairman Tim Kaine's offer to jointly call for a toning down of the rhetoric and, in language Republicans regarded as a poison pill - to "condemn the violence and threats which Republican supporters have engaged in since the passage of health reform." 

The RNC chief fired back on that matter Thursday. 

"We rejected the DNCs 'civility statement' precisely because we knew - and we have seen - that Democrats are incapable of living up to their own standards or their word," Mr. Steele said in a written comment to The Times. 

In a syndicated column titled "Steele right on Obama and Afghan war," Richard Cohen, another liberal commentator, called Mr. Woodhouse's attack on Mr. Steele "an ugly smear." 

Expressing a view shared by non-interventionist Republicans and conservatives, Mr. Cohen wrote that "Steele was right from the start. His truth was the larger one, which is that enough time has elapsed so that the war in Afghanistan can be seen as Barack Obamas." 

Mr. Cohen referred Mr. Woodhouse as "exhibit A in what, looking back, will be seen as the overselling of this particular war." 

Steve Benen at the Washington Monthly's Political Animal blog said he understood that "the urge at the DNC to give the RNC a taste of its own medicine is pretty intense, but when DNC messages about a war in 2010 are effectively identical to RNC messages about a war in 2004, there's a problem." 

Some conservative leaders who are not normally cheerleaders for Mr. Steele also came to his defense, especially over calls from such prominent Republicans as William Kristol, Liz Cheney and GOProud that Mr. Steele should resign over his Afghan remarks. 

"There are many reasons why Michael Steele should not be chairman but Afghanistan is not one of them," former Texas GOP Chairman Tom Pauken told The Times. "Republicans have legitimate reason to question the rationale for the war and whether we have an exit strategy."

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