Woman Accused Of Tossing Shoe At Clinton
A Phoenix woman accused of throwing a shoe some 60 feet
toward Hillary Rodham Clinton appeared aware during questioning by U.S. Secret
Service agents of the allegation against her, authorities said Friday.
"Ms. Ernst appeared to be in an agitated state but
aware of what she had just done," the report said.
Ernst could face up to a year in the county lockup if she is
convicted of violating a county ordinance during the Thursday incident at the
Mandalay Bay hotel-casino.
She is accused of bypassing security and walking quickly
toward a rope line about six rows from the front of a conference audience.
Police say she reached into a purse, removed the shoe and threw it overhand
toward the stage.
Clinton ducked and wasn't struck. She appeared startled but
quickly cracked a couple of jokes before continuing her keynote speech to the
Institute of Scrap Recycling Industries. The audience applauded.
This image provided by the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police
Department shows Alison Ernst, who was arre …
Ernst was ushered by security guards out of the ballroom
with her hands in the air and sat calmly afterward on a sofa in a hallway. She
wore a blonde wig, blue dress and thong sandals.
She told an Associated Press reporter she threw a shoe and
dropped some papers but did not identify herself or explain the action.
Security officers ushered reporters and photographers away.
She couldn't immediately be reached Friday. It wasn't clear
if she had a lawyer.
Brian Spellacy, Secret Service supervisory special agent in
Las Vegas, said an orange and black athletic shoe was recovered from the stage.
This image provided by the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police
Department shows Alison Ernst, who was arre …
Clinton has Secret Service protection because former
presidents and their spouses are covered for their lifetime, Spellacy said.
Authorities said Ernst wasn't a credentialed conference
attendee and wasn't supposed to have been in the ballroom, which had more than
1,000 people.
Audience members wore large conference identification badges
and were asked to present photo identification for entry to Clinton's speech.
Clinton, the former first lady and Democratic senator from
New York, has been traveling the country giving paid speeches to industry
organizations and Democratic Party groups. She said in San Francisco on Tuesday
that she was seriously considering a presidential bid.
The shoe-throwing incident reminded some of former President
George W. Bush dodging shoes thrown by an Iraqi journalist during a news
conference in Baghdad in December 2008. Shoe-throwing is considered an insult
in Arab cultures.
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