In October 2008,
Ashley Todd, a volunteer for the
U.S.
presidential campaign of
Republican John McCain, falsely claimed to have been the
victim of robbery and politically motivated
physical assault by a supporter of McCain's
Democratic opponent
Barack Obama. The story broke less than
two weeks before the 2008
United States
presidential election on November 4. Todd later confessed to
inventing the story after surveillance photos and a polygraph test
were presented. She was charged with filing a false police report,
and entered a probation program for first time offenders.
Initial claim and political commentary
Todd had worked as a field representative for the
College Republican
National Committee since August 2008 and had come to in
mid-October to recruit college students.
On October 22, 2008,
Todd claimed that she was robbed at knifepoint by a "six-foot-four
African American of medium build, dressed in dark clothes wearing
shiny shoes" at a Citizens Bank ATM in the Bloomfield
neighborhood of Pittsburgh. She also alleged
that after the robber saw a McCain bumper sticker on Todd's car, he
assaulted her, cut a reversed letter
B into her cheek, and
told her "you are going to be a Barack supporter."
Todd's story received international attention, including prominent
coverage on
Drudge Report and
Fox News.
John
Moody, executive vice president at Fox News, commented in a
blog on the network's website that "this
incident could become a watershed event in the 11 days before the
election," but also warned that "[i]f the incident turns out to be
a hoax, Senator McCain’s quest for the presidency is over, forever
linked to
race-baiting."
According to journalism website
Talking Points Memo, McCain's
Pennsylvania campaign communications director told reporters about
several aspects of the story before the facts were known or
established.
John Verrilli,
news director for Pittsburgh television station KDKA-TV
, told TPM
that the McCain spokesman "gave one of (Verrilli's) reporters a
detailed version of the attack that included a claim that the
alleged attacker said, 'You're with the McCain campaign? I'm
going to teach you a lesson.'" Verrilli also said that the
spokesperson had claimed the "B" on Todd's face stood for "Barack".
On October 24, a McCain spokesman denied that those quotes had come
from the campaign, claiming that "they came from the police and
were attributed to the McCain camp because of sloppy reporting."
Keith Olbermann noted that same
night, "... that doesn't explain why two television stations both
quoted the McCain campaign ... KDKA Pittsburgh specifically
followed the McCain quotes with ... 'Police, however, have not
confirmed that.' ... the reporter from the other station, WPXI ...
says he got those quotes first, 4:08 p.m. yesterday from McCain's
Pennsylvania communications director."
Hoax exposure and aftermath
On October 24, Todd confessed to inventing the story after police
reviewed surveillance camera photos and administered a
polygraph test. She now said that she had seen the
backwards 'B' on her face while driving, and though she did not
remember how she got it, assumed that she herself had done it
because she had had previous episodes of memory loss. According to
police, Todd provided no explanation of why she provided them the
story about the mugging instead.
Todd was charged with filing a false police report, a
misdemeanor charge with a maximum
jail sentence of two years. While jailed, Todd
underwent a court-ordered psychiatric examination and was deemed to
be competent to stand trial, but in need of further counseling. On
October 30, she agreed to a deal in which she was released from
jail, but must undergo
psychiatric counseling as condition
of her release. Upon her formal
arraignment in January, Todd would enter a
probation program for first-time
offenders, after which her record would be expunged if there had
been no further offenses. Continued mental health counseling would
also be a condition of the probation period. The deal did not
require Todd to enter a
plea.
Prior claim by Todd
According to an October 25, 2008, article in the
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, in
February 2008 Todd had claimed that her car's tires had been
slashed and campaign material had been stolen from her car because
of her support for Republican politician
Ron
Paul, an opponent of McCain for the Republican presidential
nomination. Group leader Dustan Costine told the
Post-Gazette that Todd was asked to leave the Paul
campaign a month later, after she posed as a
Mike Huckabee supporter and called the local
Republican committee seeking information about its campaign
strategies.
References
- http://foxforum.blogs.foxnews.com/2008/10/23/jmoody_1023/