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La Mesa man guilty of threats against Obama

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  • La Mesa man guilty of threats against Obama

    La Mesa man guilty of threats against Obama

    A La Mesa man finds out when free speech is no longer protected, after
    he is convicted of making threats against a candidate for president.

    FOX 5 News (San Diego, CA)
    July 28, 2009

    By Perette Godwin, FOX 5 San Diego Reporter

    SAN DIEGO, California - Walter Edward Bagdasarian walked out of
    federal court Tuesday morning the same way he walked in, wearing a
    stoic expression on his face and clutching the hand of his wife. But,
    when Bagdasarian came out of the Edward J. Schwartz Federal Building
    he was a man guilty of threatening the man running for the country's
    top spot, now President Barack Obama.

    "The government's position essentially was that the defendent intended
    to make a threat," said Assistant United States Attorney William
    Cole. "Again, the law does not turn on whether he intends to carry it
    out but whether he intends to make a threat."

    Bagdasarian requested and was granted a bench trial, meaning no jury
    decided his fate. In finding him guilty U. S. District Judge Marilyn
    Huff found the two messages Bagdasarian posted on the internet October
    22, 2008, were intended as a threat. The messages, one which read, "He
    will have a 50 cal in the head soon," were discovered after a retired
    air force officer saw them on a Yahoo finance website and called the
    secret service.

    Another email included racial slurs and read, "Shoot the n--. Country
    f----- for another 4+ years, what n-- has done ANYTHING right???? Long
    Term???? Never in history, except s-mbos."

    In defending his client, Defense Attorney Ezekial Cortez argued the
    postings were political speech and protected by the first
    amendment. He also told the judge his client was drunk when he went on
    the website.

    "Defense counsel proffered the idea that he was drunk at the time but
    as we indicated in court there was very limited evidence to
    intoxication," said Cole.

    Cortez objected to the introducction of other emails Bagdasarian sent
    to someone on November 4th, election day. One email included a YouTube
    video link showing a car being blown up after it was hit by a round
    from a weapon. Cole said the second emails were important because they
    also showed intent.

    "All these days later he is still talking about the same subject
    matter," he said. Which in the government's mind undercuts the notion
    these statements were solely the result of drunkeness."

    Phone calls to Bagdasarian's business and to the office of his
    attorney went unreturned.

    Out on $100,000 bail, the 47-year-old will be sentenced in
    October. Each count he is convicted of carries a maximum of five years
    in prison. So what will he be sentenced to, if he spends any time in
    prison?

    "Theoretical maximum is 10 years in prison," said Cole. "But again the
    government has not made a recommendation at this time and has no
    prediction at all as to what the sentence will be."


    http://www.fox5sandiego.com/news/kswb- obama-threat-suspect,0,1139589.story?track=rss
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