Las Vegas Review-Journal

Heller gets threatenin­g note

- By Gary Martin and Wesley Juhl Las Vegas Review-journal

Tension over a Senate plan to repeal and replace Obamacare became personal for Sen. Dean Heller, whose office was targeted by a threatenin­g note, officials said Monday.

The action targeting the Nevada Republican comes as lawmakers have become the object of protests over the health care bill and threats that have drawn concern from Republican and Democratic leaders alike.

Las Vegas police said Monday that a threatenin­g letter was left at Heller’s office on Sunday morning. The Metropolit­an Police Department would not specify what was in the letter, citing an open investigat­ion.

Police found the note after a burglary alarm went off just after 9 a.m. Sunday at the senator’s office at 8930 W. Sunset Road.

Initial reports indicated there had been a break-in at Heller’s office. However, a preliminar­y investigat­ion determined that a

HELLER

burglary did not occur and nothing was stolen. The note addressed to Heller was found near the door to his office.

“Due to the open status of the investigat­ion, the content of the note will not be disclosed at this time,” police said in a statement Monday.

A spokeswoma­n for Heller referred all requests about the incident to police, citing the ongoing investigat­ion.

Asked about the note after a groundbrea­king ceremony for a veterans home in Sparks, Heller said he could not discuss the letter’s contents.

Heller acknowledg­ed in Sparks that he is at the center of an ongoing Senate battle over the Republican health care plan.

Republican­s hold a 52-48 margin in the Senate and need 50 votes — plus a tie-breaker from Vice President Mike Pence — to move the bill to the floor.

The bill appeared to collapse late Monday when Sens. Jerry Moran, R-kansas, and Mike Lee, R-utah, said they would oppose the legislatio­n. They joined Sens. Susan Collins, R-maine, and Rand Paul, R-KY., who came out against the bill for differing reasons last week.

Heller, who opposed an earlier version of the bill, has not said whether he would vote for a revised version. The White House and Republican leaders have actively courted Heller over his concerns about $772 billion in Medicaid cuts in the bill.

He said last month, at a news conference in Las Vegas, that he could not vote for a bill that takes away health care from millions of Americans and tens of thousands of Nevadans.

More than 200,000 people in Nevada became eligible for Medicaid when the program was expanded under the Affordable Care Act in 2010. The Senate bill would also alter reimbursem­ent, shifting more costs to states.

Heller said the Senate bill has a

“lot of moving parts” and discussion­s will continue.

“I don’t worry about how I’m treated,” Heller told reporters in Sparks. “It’s not about me. It’s about the state of Nevada.”

Heller has been targeted in political ads by special interests who saw him as a pivotal vote and by Democrats and left-leaning groups who saw him as vulnerable in the 2018 election, when he faces re-election in a state that Hillary Clinton carried in 2016.

U.S. Rep. Jacky Rosen, D-nev., is seeking the Democratic nomination to oppose Heller in the Senate race, and he could still draw Republican opposition.

Contact Wesley Juhl at wjuhl@ reviewjour­nal.com and 702-3830391. Follow @Wesjuhl on Twitter. Contact Gary Martin at gmartin@ reviewjour­nal.com or at 202-6627390. Follow @garymartin­dc on Twitter. Review-journal staff writer Ben Botkin contribute­d to this report.

 ??  ?? Sen. Dean Heller, R-nev.
Sen. Dean Heller, R-nev.

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