PHOENIX —
Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer said Friday she was wrong when she claimed that headless bodies were turning up in the Arizona desert as part of border-related violence.
“That was an error, if I said that,” Brewer said about beheadings occurring in Arizona.
The Republican incumbent’s June comments about beheadings were raised during a Wednesday debate by Democratic challenger Terry Goddard, who said the comments were false and damaging to Arizona’s image.
Brewer didn’t respond to Goddard’s challenge about the beheadings claim — she instead changed the subject. Afterward, when reporters asked about the claim, she cut short the question-and-answer session.
But she since is acknowledging in interviews with The Associated Press and other media organizations that she was wrong.
She said she was referring to beheadings and other cartel-related violence in Mexico that she said could spill over into the United States and that she is sorry if people were misled.
“I misspoke, but you know, let me be clear, I am concerned about the border region because it continues to be reported in Mexico that there’s a lot of violence going on and we don’t want that going into Arizona.”
Brewer apparently first referred to beheadings during a June 16 interview with FOX News’ Greta Van Susteren, talking about “the kidnappings and the extortion and the beheadings and the fact that people can’t feel safe in their community” in discussing controversy surrounding the immigration law.
She went further in a June 27 interview on Phoenix television station KPNX when asked about the beheadings claim.
“Oh, our law enforcement agencies have found bodies in the desert, either buried or just lying out there, that have been beheaded,” Brewer said.
National News
Arizona governor says she was wrong about beheadings
- National News
-
-
Dozens of children killed in new Syria attack
BEIRUT (AP) — Gruesome video Saturday showed rows of dead Syrian children lying in a mosque in bloody shorts and T-shirts with gaping head wounds, haunting images of what activists called one of the deadliest regime attacks yet in Syria’s 14-month-old uprising.
Continued ... - House Republican leaders plan summer tax cut vote
- Embittered Facebook investors ponder next move
- Shock over arrest in NYC boy’s ’79 disappearance
- Astronauts enter world’s 1st private supply ship
- May 25, 2012
- Texas farmers use business wile to weather drought
- Typical CEO made $9.6M last year, AP study finds
- Dragon capsule on course for space station arrival
- Arrest in ’79 Patz case that raised parental fear
- Maine churches raising money to fight gay marriage
- May 24, 2012
- Woman with flesh-eating bacteria sits up in chair
- Legal experts discuss FAMU band member interviews
- Private supply ship flies by space station in test
- Yahoo seeks to shake up search, Web browsing
- Jury in John Edwards trial deliberates for 5th day
-
Dozens of children killed in new Syria attack


