What we have as evidence are two sentences in this paragraph;
"Caucus members also apparently looked inside a closed cardboard box near Clifford’s desk that contained copies of the U.S. Constitution donated by the American Civil Liberties Union."
The above states that they may have looked into a box.
They later said the below without saying where the note was found.
Putting the two, maybe unrelated sentences in the same paragraph without further info sounds like it's convenient for the writers agenda.
"Clifford later discovered a note left behind reading, "A Republican was here. What gives you the right to propagandize impressionable kids?" according to an account in the Portland Press Herald."
no subject
What we have as evidence are two sentences in this paragraph;
"Caucus members also apparently looked inside a closed cardboard box near Clifford’s desk that contained copies of the U.S. Constitution donated by the American Civil Liberties Union."
The above states that they may have looked into a box.
They later said the below without saying where the note was found.
Putting the two, maybe unrelated sentences in the same paragraph without further info sounds like it's convenient for the writers agenda.
"Clifford later discovered a note left behind reading, "A Republican was here. What gives you the right to propagandize impressionable kids?" according to an account in the Portland Press Herald."