SAVANNAH - Democrat Charles ``Champ'' Walker Junior sued his Republican opponent for slander to, saying attack ads that highlight Walker's past arrests and accuse him of gouging inmates' families are false and misleading. <br>
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The suit, which opponent Max Burns dismissed as ``baseless,'' comes five days before voters decide which candidate will represent the new 12th Congressional District that includes Savannah, Augusta and Athens. <br>
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Walker said of Burns' attacks, ``This is one of the nastiest campaigns in Georgia, probably in the nation, and it's all personal against me. He talks about integrity and responsibility. Today is about him taking responsibility.'' <br>
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Walker, an Augusta businessman, denied the suit was politically motivated, though he acknowledged Burns' attacks tightened the race in a district that was drawn as a safe seat for Democrats. <br>
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Burns, a Sylvania college professor, has aired television ads saying Walker's past arrests, on charges from shoplifting to driving with a suspended license, show he's too irresponsible to be a congressman. <br>
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The 34-year-old Walker was arrested four times on misdemeanor charges between 1988 and 1991. But prosecutors dropped the charges in each case, which Burns' ads don't mention. <br>
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Walker's suit says the ad's statements illegally harmed his reputation because they infer Walker was guilty of criminal conduct. <br>
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The suit also says Burns slandered Walker with a radio ad that accused Walker of setting collect calling rates from Georgia prisons that charged inmates' families ten dollars a minute. The lawsuit says the accusation is false.
http://accesswdun.com/article/2002/10/188219
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