Source:
APTOWNSHEND, Vt. (AP) - Slain Pakistani opposition leader Benazir Bhutto worried about her security in the weeks before her assassination, asking former U.S. Ambassador to Croatia Peter Galbraith - a longtime friend - for help obtaining computer security devices known as "jammers."
Galbraith, who lives in Townshend, Vermont, got an e-mail message from Bhutto on December 13th in which she complained that the jammers she was given by the government of Pakistan didn't work.
She asked him for help obtaining better ones, and technicians to operate them.
Galbraith, the son of former U.S. Ambassador to India John Kenneth Galbraith, told her he would try. Two days later, Bhutto - using a BlackBerry - wrote back.
In that e-mail, she said she'd been told another attack was planned for December 21st.
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