Bay Area Lawmaker Threats May Be Tied To Arizona Shooting
SAN FRANCISCO (CBS 5 / BCN / KCBS) -- Detectives investigating the shooting of Congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords in Arizona last weekend are considering a connection to California state Sen. Leland Yee, who has received death threats for criticizing former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin.
Yee, D-San Francisco, received calls this week from sheriff's detectives in Pima County, Ariz., where Giffords was among 19 people shot outside a Safeway grocery store. Six people died in the shooting but Giffords, believed to be the target, survived.
KCBS' Chris Filippi Reports
"We haven't been updated on if there's a connection," Yee's spokesman Adam Keigwin said Friday.
Keigwin said Yee's office received threats relevant to Giffords' investigation in April 2010, when the senator helped reveal that officials at California State University, Stanislaus shredded documents related to Palin's contract fees as a keynote speaker.
During the incident, students dug through a trash bin outside a campus administration building and found a shredded contract with a speaker who required first-class air travel from Anchorage, Alaska.
Yee chided the university in news reports, and in response, several voice, text and graphic threats were sent to his office.
>> Audio: Listen To Threatening Voice Message #1 (.mp3)
>> Audio: Listen To Threatening Voice Message #2 (.wav)
"Good thing you run in San Francisco 'cause you'd never make it anywhere else," said a sign-off to a voicemail that was preceded by substantial anti-homosexual comments.
Additional faxes and phone calls were overtly racist, both anti-Chinese and anti-black in reference to President Obama, Keigwin said.
>> Download Copy Of Racist Fax Sent To Yee (.pdf) - Warning: Offensive Material
No one has been arrested for threats made against Yee, which Keigwin said have happened for more than six years.
In one of the office's most notable incidents, calls to Yee's office said the senator was a "dead man" if he showed up to a 2005 news conference on violent video game legislation.
Keigwin received racist text messages again referencing violent video game legislation in 2009. Officers tracked down the person who made the threats and issued a warning, but no arrest was made, Keigwin said.
Keigwin said he didn't have a lot of information on how threats are typically handled because the California Highway Patrol manages the investigations.
The CHP and Pima County Sheriff's Office were unavailable Friday to comment on the investigation.
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