Community | April 07, 2010 | 12 comments

Man arrested for threatening Pelosi lives in Public Housing?

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derk
My favorite part of the article: "Rose Riggs, a neighbor of Giusti in a public housing complex in the city's Tenderloin district, said she saw two plainclothes and two uniformed officers take him away in zip-tie cuffs. Riggs, 62, said Giusti was known for engaging in heated political debates with others in the building."

Please, oh, please let this guy be living on the taxpayers dime.
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    Community,   Politics,   California Politics
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12 comments // Man arrested for threatening Pelosi lives in Public Housing?

  • ryan8566
  • tylervictoria1
  • raylinmarie
    • 0
      raylinmarie  
    • You know what's funny too is that San Francisco has a public healthcare program called Healthy SF which guarantees every San Francisco resident access to healthcare.

    • 2 years ago
  • artemis6
    • 0
      artemis6  
    • Best throw all resources possible into the EDUCATION and Healthcare systems , to PREVENT THIS . He is either crazy or a moron . Both ?

    • 2 years ago
  • Raven6
    • 0
      Raven6  
    • Threatening a federal official is punishable by up to 10 years in prison and a $250,000 fine, the Justice Department statement said.

    • 2 years ago
  • Raven6
    • 0
      Raven6  
    • Typical Teabagger. "Keep your Govmint hands off my medicare !" Or that other jackass Judd Nelson, "I was on food stamps for years, the government didn't help me." Dumbass.

      There were hundreds of these calls made. We have to prosecute or these retards will get worse.

    • 2 years ago
  • derk
    • 0
      derk  
    • I say this b/c there is no way this can be true: "Gregory Lee Giusti, 48, was arrested at his San Francisco home shortly after noon, said Joseph Schadler, spokesman for the FBI's San Francisco office."

      There just aren't any 'homes' in the Tenderloin ...

    • 2 years ago
  • raylinmarie
    • 0
      raylinmarie  
    • derk:

      Um, a home doesn't have to be a traditional house. Someone could consider their apartment to be their home.

      I live in San Francisco. Plenty of Tenderloin residents call it the "home," even if they perhaps don't live in a traditional house. I'm not exactly sure why your argument is supposed to be...

    • 2 years ago
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