A
woman rushed past security and threw a shoe at Hillary Clinton in Las
Vegas on Thursday, but it missed and the former US secretary of state
laughed off the incident.
The woman launched the
projectile at the 66-year-old former First Lady as she was addressing a
meeting of the Institute of Scrap Recycling Industries (ISRI).
Clinton,
the presumed frontrunner for the Democratic presidential nomination in
2016, ducked as the object whizzed past at head height to the left of
her.
"What was that, a bat?... Is that somebody
throwing something at me?" Clinton said initially at the event at the
Mandalay Bay hotel/casino, according to video footage by the local KTNV
station.
Regaining her composure and sense of humor,
she added: "Is that part of Cirque du Soleil?" -- a reference to the
acrobatic dance troupe, which has several shows in Vegas.
"My
goodness, I didn't know that solid waste management was so
controversial. Thank goodness she didn't play softball like I did," she
said, drawing laughter and cheers from the audience.
The
blonde woman who threw the shoe was immediately escorted out of the
hall, her hands in the air. She was later arrested, according to the Las
Vegas Review-Journal.
A spokesman for the organizers said the woman was not accredited for the meeting.
"Our
staff denied her access before she later rushed past security. An ISRI
staffer then stopped her as she approached the stage. She was then
handed over to law enforcement," ISRI spokesman Mark Carpenter told AFP.
He
added: "We are grateful that Secretary Clinton continued in a
professional manner to share her firsthand knowledge and experience of
how the recycling industry has a positive impact on the economy and
environment."
A spokesman for Clinton did not immediately respond to request for confirmation or comment.
The
most famous shoe-thrower of recent years was the Iraqi journalist who
hurled his own footwear at president George W. Bush at a press
conference in Baghdad in December 2008.
Muntazer
al-Zaidi was sentenced to three years in prison for assaulting a head of
state. That was reduced to one year on appeal, and his sentence was cut
further for good behavior.
In February 2009 a German
research student threw a shoe at Chinese premier Wen Jiabao during a
speech at Cambridge University. Martin Jahnke, 27, was cleared of
committing a public order offense.
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