Paul officials
deny involvement in Giuliani Mackinac ferry taunting
September 25, 2007
By DAWSON BELL
FREE PRESS LANSING BUREAU
Texas congressman and Republican presidential candidate
Ron Paul does not believe that 9/11 was an “inside
job” and his campaign distanced itself from a raucous
pro-Paul demonstration on a Mackinac Island ferry Friday
night, a Paul spokesman said Monday.
In the incident, Paul's supporters taunted former New
York Mayor Rudy Giuliani for alleged complicity in the
attacks.
Spokesman Jesse Benton said the campaign was aware of
Internet reports about the demonstration, which occurred
late Friday when Giuliani boarded a ferry loaded with
Paul supporters leaving a Michigan GOP conference. No
Paul campaign officials were involved, Benton said.
According to one eyewitness, Giuliani was beset by dozens
of Paul enthusiasts as he was leaving the island, some
of whom shouted taunts about 9/11, including: “9/11
was an inside job” and “Rudy, Rudy, what did
you do with the gold?” -- an apparent reference
to rumors about $200 million in gold alleged to have disappeared
in the collapse of the World Trade Center towers.
Ed Wyszynski, a longtime party activist from Eagle, said
the Paul supporters threatened to throw Giuliani overboard
and harrassed him as he took shelter in the ferry’s
pilothouse for the 15-minute journey back to Mackinaw
City.
“It was awful,” said Wyszynski, who supports
Mitt Romney for the GOP presidential nomination.
“I was embarrassed to be a Republican. Never, ever,
have I seen such a disgraceful performance.”
A blurry video of the incident was posted on the Website
www.dailypaul.com in which chants of “Ron Paul,
Ron Paul” predominate, but also include someone
shouting “Lies cannot stand the light of day.”
Several other pro-Paul forums carried triumphant accounts
of the event, suggesting that Giuliani was intimidated
by the show of support for a rival.
Giuliani campaign spokesman Jeff Barker said Monday that
Giuliani was not intimidated, and welcomes exchanges with
those who disagee with him. Barker declined to comment
on whether or not the ferry passengers accused Giuliani,
widely viewed as a stalwart presence in the aftermath
of the attacks, with complicity in 9/11.
Paul spokesman Benton said Monday he understood that
the group on the ferry, part of an impressive Paul presence
at the Republican conference, was excited when Giuliani
joined the trip from the island and “turned up the
volume to show support” for Paul.
But the Paul campaign had no direct involvement in the
incident and does not share the views about 9/11 witnessed
by Wyszynski, Benton said.
“They were not employees. They were not enlisted,”
he said. If they expressed the view that Giuliani somehow
knew in advance about the attacks, they were not representing
the campaign, he said.
“If you’re asking whether Ron Paul believes
our government was involved” in 9/11, “the
answer is unequivocally no,” Benton said. “Ron
Paul does not think that 9/11 was an inside job.”
Harrassing Giuliani in that fashion is “not something
we would condone in any way.” Benton said.
Giuliani has drawn the ire of both the so-called 9/11
truthers, who don’t believe Islamic jihadists were
responsible for the attacks, and Paul supporters, who
endorse their candidate’s push for a new commission
to review events leading up to the attacks.
Benton said the latter is based on Paul’s belief
that another review of 9/11 would reveal additional government
incompetence, but not complicity, in what happened.
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