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Massimo Tartaglia called him clown seconds before hitting him with an statue.
An attacker hurled a statuette at Italian Premier Silvio Berlusconi, striking the leader in the face at the end of a rally Sunday and leaving the stunned 73-year-old media mogul with a broken nose and bloodied mouth.
He suffered two broken teeth, a minor nose fracture and cuts to his lip after being struck with an object said to be a souvenir of the city's cathedral.
Mr Berlusconi, 73, tried to assure supporters afterwards he was OK but was taken to hospital for tests.
An Italian man said to have a history of mental problems has been arrested. Massimo Tartaglia, 42, had no previous criminal record, police were quoted as saying.
Italian Source Video
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Well, if anyone deserves such things, its him. Though its pretty sad that this event will probably just gain him sympathy from the public
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United States12607 Posts
hate to say it, but dude had it coming
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On December 14 2009 07:17 538 wrote:Well, if anyone deserves such things, its him. Though its pretty sad that this event will probably just gain him sympathy from the public 
My thoughts exactly. :/
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United States4796 Posts
Does he or does he not have connections to the Mafia..?
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I don't wish bad things to the man, I just wish he would get his slimy tentacles out of every orifice of my beloved italy.
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On December 14 2009 07:19 JWD wrote: hate to say it, but dude had it coming This.
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can you give more information?
I can't read the italian article
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Massimo Tartaglia is sooo gonna get whacked by the mafia now :p
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Damm, but the pictures are taken in such a way so as to make the damage look a lot more severe than it actually is...
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Sympathy for the attacker. I hope he will get minimal punishment. Preferably none.
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English Article: http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5h-gZ27SjSkQz0utROaRHDDidV2EgD9CIM4K80
+ Show Spoiler + ROME — An attacker hurled a statuette at Italian Premier Silvio Berlusconi, striking the leader in the face at the end of a rally Sunday and leaving the stunned 73-year-old media mogul with a broken nose and bloodied mouth.
Police said the 42-year-old man accused of attacking Berlusconi as he signed autographs in Milan was immediately taken into custody. The Italian leader was rushed to a hospital where he was being held overnight.
The attack occurred at a time when Berlusconi, one of Italy's wealthiest men, is embroiled in a sex scandal, a divorce case with his wife and public protests demanding his resignation.
TV showed the stunned leader with blood under his nose, on his mouth and under one eye as he was lifted to his feet by aides after Sunday's attack. He was hustled into the back of a car, but he immediately got out, apparently to show he was not badly injured.
But Berlusconi suffered a "small fracture" of the nose, two broken teeth and an injury to the inside and outside of his lip, said Paolo Klun, chief spokesman for Milan's San Raffaele Hospital.
"He wanted to go home right away, but he is being held as a precaution" for overnight observation, Klun said. The premier suffered "a significant bruising trauma from this blunt instrument that was hurled at him."
Police first said it appeared the assailant had punched Berlusconi in the face while clutching a souvenir statue of Milan's Duomo, or cathedral with gargoyles that symbolizes the city. But state TV later showed a video, somewhat blurry, of what appeared to be the attacker's hand coming close to Berlusconi's face while holding the statue, then letting go of the object at the last minute as it hit the premier's face.
Berlusconi was "very shaken and demoralized," Klun said. "He didn't understand very well what happened to him."
Immediately after the attack, the premier, after getting out of the car and without saying a word, was pulled back into the vehicle by bodyguards.
The attack occurred after Berlusconi had just finished delivering a long, vigorous speech at the rally to thousands of applauding supporters from his Freedom People party in the square outside the cathedral at about 6:30 p.m.
Officials at Milan's police headquarters said they didn't immediately know what the miniature Duomo statue was made of.
Berlusconi's spokesman, speaking by telephone from the emergency room from San Raffaele hospital where the premier was taken, told Sky TG24 TV that doctors had decided to keep Berlusconi in the hospital overnight for observation. "We'll see what the doctors say tomorrow morning," spokesman Paolo Bonauiti told Sky. The exams of his jaw area included a CT scan, Bonaiuti said.
Police identified the man they were questioning as Massimo Tartaglia, 42. They said Tartaglia didn't have any criminal record but had suffered psychological problems in the past.
Defense Minister Ignazio La Russa told reporters he ran to help police hustle the man away from the scene of the attack "to keep him from a possible lynching from the crowd."
The assailant "was a man who had mixed in with the people who were applauding (Berlusconi), shaking his hand," La Russa said.
The attack occurred at a difficult political time for Berlusconi, who has been plagued by scandals.
On Dec. 5, tens of thousands of Italians fed up with the premier marched peacefully through Rome to demand his resignation.
The demonstrators expressed dismay over what they see as the businessman's conflict of interests, citing repeated government-backed laws they contend were tailored to help shield Berlusconi from prosecution in cases involving his media, real estate and sports empire. Berlusconi claims the laws benefit all citizens.
Other critics cite Berlusconi's sex scandals.
Berlusconi's wife is divorcing him after complaining about his infatuation with young women. A southern Italian businessman has told investigators he procured some 30 attractive young women for parties and dinners at the premier's Rome residence and Sardinian villa. Among the guests was a high-end prostitute who claimed she slept with Berlusconi. The premier has denied ever paying for sex.
Berlusconi has steadfastly denied any wrongdoing and blames his judicial woes on prosecutors he claims sympathize with the opposition left. Several of the cases either ended in acquittal or were dropped when limitation statutes expired. Others are pending.
On Sunday, Italian President Giorgio Napolitano condemned the "grave and unusual gesture of aggression" against Berlusconi. In a statement, the head of state renewed his plea that conflicting political points of view be expressed "within the limits of responsible self-control" and while "preventing and heading off every impulse and spiral of violence."
Associated Press reporter Giovanni Fontana contributed to this report from Rome.
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On December 14 2009 07:24 .risingdragoon wrote: can you give more information?
I can't read the italian article was giving an autograph, got hit with a knuckles, nothing much to say about it
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that guy is going to have a bad night (talking about Tartaglia)
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Most of the replies are good to quote and answer to:
On December 14 2009 07:17 538 wrote:Well, if anyone deserves such things, its him. Though its pretty sad that this event will probably just gain him sympathy from the public 
This had already been speculated long before the incident, and it is what is happening. Although the aggressor was a mentally insane person and doesn't appear to have any open connection with any politic party the use of violence is being used as an accusation to defend Berlusconi.
On December 14 2009 07:21 El.Divino wrote: Does he or does he not have connections to the Mafia..?
Many past italian presidents did, but what in the USA are called Guidos (openly supporting fascism and actively supporting Berlusconi) see the mafia as something "fun" and as an example to follow. Berlusconi, though, is more commonly considered to have reached his position through Freemasonry support.
Emblematic was the past scandal of Vallettopoli, which during 2006-2007 (can't precisely remember the year) saw famous Paparazzi Fabrizio Corona become an icon who would bash italian celebrities and hide behind the claim of being "protected", and had thousands of admirers.
On December 14 2009 07:24 DwmC_Foefen wrote: Massimo Tartaglia is sooo gonna get whacked by the mafia now :p
He most likely won't. A joke which is quickly spreading is that Tartaglia is going to be processed while Berlusconi is still free. (Berlusconi is guilty of having changed laws to among other things protect Mediaset, his TV, and Mondadori, book publishing brand).
On December 14 2009 07:24 bITt.mAN wrote: Damm, but the pictures are taken in such a way so as to make the damage look a lot more severe than it actually is...
He is just old, you don't need to work in an hospital to see how badly old ladies can come out of a fall from the stairs.
My 2 cents: it was just bound to happen. Italy's political state is not known to foreign countries because his gags draw the attention away, but it's pretty much a dollhouse with puppet masters left and right.
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On December 14 2009 08:14 r33k wrote: Many past italian presidents did, but what in the USA are called Guidos (openly supporting fascism and actively supporting Berlusconi) see the mafia as something "fun" and as an example to follow. Berlusconi, though, is more commonly considered to have reached his position through Freemasonry support. ...the fuck
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