http://www.mcclatchydc.com/251/story/54360.html

Death threat, vandalism hit ACORN after McCain comments

By Greg Gordon | McClatchy Newspapers

WASHINGTON — An ACORN community organizer received a death threat and 
the liberal activist group's Boston and Seattle offices were 
vandalized Thursday, reflecting mounting tensions over its role in 
registering 1.3 million mostly poor and minority Americans to vote 
next month.

Attorneys for the Association of Community Organizers for Reform Now 
were notifying the FBI and the Justice Department's Civil Rights 
Division of the incidents, said Brian Kettenring, a Florida-based 
spokesman for the group.

Republicans, including presidential candidate John McCain, have 
verbally attacked the group repeatedly in recent days, alleging a 
widespread vote-fraud scheme, although they've provided little proof. 
It was disclosed Thursday that the FBI is examining whether thousands 
of fraudulent voter-registration applications submitted by some ACORN 
workers were part of a systematic effort or isolated incidents.

Kettenring said that a senior ACORN staffer in Cleveland, after 
appearing on television this week, got an e-mail that said she "is 
going to have her life ended."

A female staffer in Providence, R.I., got a threatening call from 
someone who said words to the effect of "We know you get off work at 
9," then uttered racial epithets, he said.

McClatchy is withholding the women's names because of the threats.

Separately, vandals broke into the group's Boston and Seattle offices 
and stole computers, Kettenring said.

The incidents came the day after McCain charged in the final 
presidential debate that ACORN's voter-registration drive "may be 
perpetrating one of the greatest frauds in voter history" and may 
be "destroying the fabric of democracy."

McCain's comments provoked a response from ACORN.

"I would not say that Senator McCain is inciting violence," 
Kettenring said, "but I would say that his statements about the role 
of this manufactured scandal were totally outlandish. We would call 
on Senator McCain to tamp down the fringe elements in his party."

McCain's campaign didn't immediately respond to requests for comment.

Kettenring said that ACORN had received growing amounts of hate mail 
in recent weeks, but "the campaign debate sort of tipped it over to a 
scary point, where raising allegations of voter fraud went from a 
cynical campaign ploy to really inciting racial violence."

Since McCain's remarks, ACORN's 87 offices across the country have 
received hundreds of hostile e-mails, many of them containing racial 
slurs, Kettenring said. "We believe that these are specifically 
McCain supporters" sending the messages, he said.

The e-mail to the Cleveland employee was traced to a Facebook Web 
page in the name of a Baltimore man. It featured a photo of a McCain-
Palin sign.

Kettenring said that the bulk of the e-mails had been either "flat-
out racist" or had racial overtones. Most of the group's 400 members 
and about 80 percent of the 13,000 voter-registration canvassers are 
African-American or Latino.

It's unclear whether the alleged threats violated federal law, but 
Jonah Goldman, the director of the National Campaign for Fair 
Elections at the Lawyers' Committee for Civil Rights Under Law, a 
nonpartisan, nonprofit legal organization that battles 
discrimination, argued that the Voting Rights Act should apply.

"A real concern is the impact that these terrible acts have on the 
people who registered through these registration drives," Goldman 
said. "Legitimate, eligible voters who sign up through these 
registration drives may be understandably intimidated and choose not 
to show up at the polls, and the Voting Rights Act prevents voter 
intimidation."

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