spoke to people at the scene who had opposing views of the statue.
Demetrius Aspinall, 22, who works at a nearby farmers’ market said: “When the lady started kicking it, then it got serious. Just because you don’t like it, you shouldn’t be taking it upon yourself to destroy it.”
But Mirian Hernandez, a 62-year-old interpreter, said she understood the woman’s angry reaction: “Oh my God that is disgusting. As a woman I’m doubly offended … I guess that woman got offended. I would have just ignored it but sometimes you can’t ignore something.”
The paper reported a number of reporters turned up at Scioli's address, and a man, who looked nothing like the artist at the scene, said he didn't know anything about it.
The man's mother shouted however: “It was Danny! It was Danny, his childhood friend who never grew up!”
Scioli defended the stunt saying: “That’s the nature of the work. It wasn’t built to last. I think it’s unfortunate.
“I do believe satire gets to the truth of matters. It was lighthearted. The way it escalated is unfortunate.“
He then went on to claim he didn't know who Donald Trump and Clinton were: “I completely had nothing to do with it. Someone gave my name,” he said. “I had nothing to do with it. I had nothing to do with the Hillary Clinton or the Trump statue, I never heard of these people.”
Both Scioli and his mom declined to name “Danny.”
It's not the first time an offensive statue has appeared of a presidential nominee - anarchist collective INDECLINE erected a caricature of Donald Trump near Union Square in August which was up all day until it was removed.
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