Woman says Allen used racial slur repeatedly
George Allen's campaign manager denies the latest accusations
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Woman says Allen used racial slur Sept. 27: Another woman is coming forward to say she witnessed Sen. George Allen repeatedly using a racial slur. “Hardball’s” David Shuster has the exclusive story. Hardball |
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Video: Is George Allen racist? Sept. 25: Larry Sabato, director of the Center for Politics at the University of Virginia and a classmate of Sen: "I absolutely believe that he used the 'N' word." Hardball |
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Video: Gillespie defends George Allen Sept. 26: Ed Gillespie, treasurer for Sen. George Allen’s political action committee, defends Allen against critics who say he is racist. Hardball |
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Just six weeks before the congressional elections, Virginia's incumbent senator, George Allen, is now facing more charges that he used racial slurs.
Pat Waring, 75, of Chesterton, Md., first brought her story to MSNBC when she contacted us in a direct phone call. We then conducted a series of interviews. Waring says that at a sports match in the late 1970's, Allen repeatedly use the ‘n’ word to describe blacks.
"I just didn't think in the late 70's people would be so ugly and so overt about it and so public," Waring said.
Waring says that in 1978, she and her then-husband, Robert Michael Schwartz, had just moved to Charlottesville, Va. Friends from the time confirm that Schwartz was a Ph.d. candidate at the University of Virginia, an avid rugby player and the volunteer coach of the school's rugby club team.
MSNBC has also confirmed Pat Waring worked in a doctor's office and came to some of the rugby games. Waring says there is one game, from either the fall of 1978 or the spring of 1979 that she will never forget.
"I heard to my left, the ‘n’ word, and I heard it again, and I looked around and heard it again,” she said. “And there was this fellow sitting on the ground. He was putting on red rugby shoes, it is seared in my brain, believe me. And he was kind of showing off I guess, but he was telling a story about something or other and in the story was a lot of ‘n’ words. So, I got out of the bleacher and I went over and I said young man, I am the coach's wife and if you don't mind, would you please not use that word. And he in essence told me to buzz off.”
Waring said when she learned the man using the slurs was George Allen, son of the Washington Redskins coach, she was “crestfallen.”
“I thought, ‘My god this just can't be. He can't just sit there in front of all of these people,’” Waring said. “There were people all over the place. And he was talking loudly or I never would have heard him."
Waring says the incident has stayed with her because of the ‘n’ word, because Allen's father had been coach of the Washington Redskins in the 1970's and because she is a lifelong Redskins fan.
There is more to the story. A few weeks after the alleged incident at the rugby game, Waring says she and an elderly relative ran into Allen at a local fair.
“Loping across the field came this young man,” she said. “And as I recall, he was politicking then and he shook my aunt's hand and I hadn't told her anything about this because she was so upsettable and such a sweet old lady that I wouldn't even want her to hear this ugly story …When he got to me, he didn't recognize me. And I did not shake his hand. I just said looked him in the eye and said, ‘You do not remember me, do you?’ And then he remembered me. And then I could see the light go on in his eyes. And at that point, he turned and scurried off like scared rabbit I guess.”
The aunt who allegedly witnessed the run-in at the fair passed away. But another Waring relative, Beverly Brewster, who graduated from UVA’s law school one year behind Allen, told us Waring talked about the alleged Allen incident at the time. Another relative whom we spoke to says Waring told the story "through the years." Several people say she talked about it this summer.
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