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Cohen, a pawnbroker and owner of a cleaning products distribution company, ran against several veteran politicians, spending $2 million
-- mostly his own money -- on his campaign, more than twice as much as all his opponents combined. He gained strong name recognition with a flurry of advertising featuring people who said they got jobs at employment fairs he held. The location and timing for Sunday's announcement -- a heated beer garden at a Chicago bar during the Super Bowl
-- perplexed some patrons who were trying to watch the New Orleans Saints take on the Indianapolis Colts. "It's a way to grab some headlines I guess," said 53-year-old Rick Kokonas wearing a New Orleans T-shirt. Cohen was arrested in 2005 on domestic battery charges for allegedly pushing his then-girlfriend, Amanda Eneman, against a wall and holding a knife to her throat. The charges were dropped when she failed to show up for a court date. He has denied the allegations and called that relationship tumultuous. Eneman had issued a statement Saturday through her attorney saying that, based on her observations and Cohen's behavior during their relationship, she "does not believe that he is fit to hold any public office, including that of lieutenant governor." Cohen said Eneman's statement did not affect his decision.
[Associated
Press;
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