Activist spotted on Halloween dressed as bin Laden
faces more charges in Maine
Published: Wednesday, November 15, 2006 | 5:08 PM ET
Canadian Press: DAVID SHARP
PORTLAND, Maine (AP) - A Democratic activist who was
arrested after he was spotted on a highway overpass
dressed as Osama bin Laden on Halloween faces
additional charges for the stunt.

Tom Connolly was charged Wednesday with terrorizing
and reckless conduct, in addition to the original
charge of criminal threatening, prosecutor Stephanie
Anderson said. All three charges are misdemeanours.

"Halloween or not, in this day and age you do not get
to dress as an international terrorist and wave what
appears to be an AK-47 at rush hour traffic," Anderson
said.

Police responded to calls from motorists on Interstate
295 about a man on an overpass wearing a white robe
and carrying a fake assault rifle. The costume
included a rubber mask, plastic dynamite and grenades,
in addition to the toy assault rifle. Before he was
arrested, Connolly walked toward officers as plastic
grenades tumbled onto the ground, an officer said.

Anderson said Connolly created an "incredibly
dangerous" situation for motorists, for police - and
for himself. "He's lucky he didn't get shot," she
said.

Connolly's lawyer, Daniel Knight, said Wednesday there
was no mistaking Connolly for a terrorist on
Halloween.


"His protest involved a plastic squirt gun that was
not used in any menacing manner whatsoever while Tom
was in a costume on Halloween," Knight said.

Furthermore, he said, Connolly was holding a sign with
a political statement about the Taxpayer Bill of
Rights, or TABOR, which was defeated by voters Nov. 7.
Police said at least one person who saw a sign held by
Connolly thought it said "Taliban."

Connolly, 49, a defence lawyer, made headlines when he
divulged President George W. Bush's drunken-driving
arrest days before the 2000 election. During the
Democratic Convention, Connolly passed out "W is for
Wiener" buttons. He also has been known to don a
George W. Bush mask and dance for passing motorists.

Anderson, a Republican, said Connolly probably would
have been charged even if he was wearing a George
Washington costume instead of an Osama bin Laden
costume. The problem, she said, was that the gun
looked real and that he pointed it at people.

Each charge carries a maximum penalty of 364 days in
jail, but a lengthy jail term was unlikely, Anderson
said. A trial was scheduled for Dec. 19.

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