First Amendment to the United States Constitution | First Amendment | Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution | Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution | Equal Rights Amendment | Second Amendment to the United States Constitution | Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution | Fifth Amendment | Seventeenth Amendment to the United States Constitution | Fourth Amendment | Second Amendment | Poor Law Amendment Act 1834 | Thirteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution | Nineteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution | Fourteenth Amendment | Eighteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution | seventeenth amendment | Sixteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution | Nineteenth Amendment | Fifteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution | constitutional amendment | Bart Stupak | Twentieth Amendment to the United States Constitution | Titles of Nobility Amendment | Thirteenth Amendment | First Amendment Center | Eleventh Amendment to the United States Constitution | Tenth Amendment to the United States Constitution | Tenth Amendment | Sixth Amendment to the United States Constitution |
Saltonstall cited Stupak's authoring of the anti-abortion Stupak–Pitts Amendment to the proposed Affordable Health Care for America Act, as well as Stupak's disagreement with changes made to the amendment by the U.S. Senate.
The plaque was then traded to Baptist missionary Harry Coates, who sold it to Las Vegas casino magnate Bob Stupak by 1987 for $10,000 and 200,000 shares in Stupak's casino.
Bart Stupak, American politician, elected to the U.S. House of Representatives