US congressman apologises for threatening to throw reporter over balcony

‘I will break you in half,’ said Michael Grimm to TV reporter Michael Scotto

U.S. Rep. Michael Grimm (R-NY) was caught on a television camera saying to a reporter, “I’ll break you in half,” after he was asked in an interview about a federal investigation into campaign finance violations. Photograph: Reuters
U.S. Rep. Michael Grimm (R-NY) was caught on a television camera saying to a reporter, “I’ll break you in half,” after he was asked in an interview about a federal investigation into campaign finance violations. Photograph: Reuters

US representative Michael Grimm, a former marine who threatened to throw a television reporter over a balcon after an interview in the Capitol, apologised yesterday and said he had overreacted.

"I will break you in half," Grimm told Michael Scotto of cable channel NY1 News in the confrontation late on Tuesday. Scotto had asked the New York Republican about a federal investigation into possible finance violations by his campaign.

The question came after Scotto interviewed Grimm on camera about the State of the Union address President Barack Obama had just delivered to a joint session of Congress.


Apologised
On Wednesday, Scotto wrote in a post on Twitter that Grimm had phoned him to apologise and said he had overreacted. "I accepted his apology," the reporter said.

READ SOME MORE

Grimm walked away when asked on camera about the federal probe, but then returned to confront the reporter. He could be heard telling Scotto, “I’ll break you in half.” NY1 said Grimm also threatened to throw Scotto over a balcony.

Grimm, of the New York City borough of Staten Island, initially defended himself, issuing a statement late on Tuesday saying Scotto had taken a “cheap shot” by asking a question about a topic other than Obama’s speech.

On Wednesday, Grimm told reporters his outburst had been wrong. Asked if he had been drinking, he laughed and said “no”, according to an interview aired on NBC News.

He told the Washington Post: "I'm a human being and sometimes your emotions get the better of you and the bottom line though is it shouldn't happen, you shouldn't lose your cool and that's why I apologised." Calls and emails to his office were not immediately answered.

A fundraiser for Grimm, Diana Durand, was arrested this month on charges she illegally funnelled more than $10,000 to his campaign. Federal investigators have been looking into the lawmaker’s fundraising for at least two years.

Grimm was elected to the House of Representatives in 2010 as part of a wave of conservatives backed by the Tea Party movement, which advocates small government and minimal taxes. He grew up in New York, dropped out of college to join the marines, and served in the Gulf War, then joined the FBI as a clerk while going to college at night. Grimm eventually became a special agent investigating financial fraud and organized crime before leaving the FBI to open a health food store. – (Reuters)