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arts / rec.arts.tv / Violent White Trash: Pro-Trump death threats prompt bills in 3 states to protect election workers

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o Violent White Trash: Pro-Trump death threats prompt bills in 3 states to protectTrump's Defeat Worst In History

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Violent White Trash: Pro-Trump death threats prompt bills in 3 states to protect election workers

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Subject: Violent White Trash: Pro-Trump death threats prompt bills in 3 states to protect election workers
Date: Mon, 24 Jan 2022 15:43:49 -0000 (UTC)
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 by: Trump's Defeat - Mon, 24 Jan 2022 15:43 UTC

Pro-Trump death threats prompt bills in 3 states to protect election
workers

Bills in Vermont, Maine, Washington would toughen penalties for
criminal threats or make it easier to prosecute offenders
Lawmakers cite threats documented in Reuters reports as an impetus for
bills

Jan 24 (Reuters) - In Vermont, lawmakers are considering bills to make it
easier to prosecute people who threaten election officials. In Maine,
proposed legislation would stiffen penalties for such intimidation. In
Washington, state senators voted this month to make threatening election
workers a felony.

The measures follow a Reuters series of investigative reports documenting
a nationwide wave of threats and harassment against election
administrators by Donald Trump supporters who embrace the former
president�s false voting-fraud claims. Sponsors and supporters of the
legislation in all three states cited Reuters reporting as an impetus for
proposing tougher enforcement.

Washington state Senator David Frockt, a Seattle Democrat, said the
reports �gave us more evidence� to build support for legislation to hold
accountable those who threaten election officials.

In Maine, a bill authored by Democratic state Representative Bruce White
would enhance penalties for anyone who �intentionally interferes by force,
violence or intimidation� with election administration. Secretary of State
Shenna Bellows cited the Reuters reporting in testimony supporting the
bill.

�This is unacceptable,� she said, noting that two municipal clerks in
Maine were threatened with violence.

In all, Reuters documented more than 850 threats and hostile messages to
U.S. election officials and workers. Nearly all the communications echoed
Trump�s baseless claims that he lost the 2020 election because of fraud.
More than 100 of the threats could meet the federal threshold for criminal
prosecution, according to law professors and attorneys who reviewed them.

Prosecutions in such cases have been rare. But on Friday, a U.S.
Department of Justice task force on election threats announced its first
indictment, charging a Texas man for posting online threats against three
officials in Georgia. An assistant attorney general said the case is among
�dozens� being investigated by the task force, which was formed shortly
after Reuters in June published the first in the series of reports on
election-related threats.

In Vermont, menacing voicemails to Secretary of State Jim Condos and his
staff � and a decision by police and prosecutors not to seek charges �
spurred lawmakers to reconsider state laws that enshrine some of America�s
oldest and strongest free-speech protections. Two measures introduced this
month would make it easier to charge suspects for criminal threats and
toughen penalties when they target public officials.

An unidentified man left a first round of hostile messages for Condos'
office shortly after the 2020 election. Then, last fall, the same man left
voicemails threatening Condos and his staff, along with two Reuters
journalists who had interviewed the man about his earlier threats.

�Justice is coming,� the man warned in an October message. �All you dirty
c---suckers are about to get f---ing popped. I f---ing guarantee it.�

Condos said in an interview that he expected the threatener would face no
consequences under state law. Police and prosecutors already had reviewed
the caller�s earlier messages and decided they were protected speech.

Frustrated, Condos wrote to a half-dozen lawmakers, urging them to
consider legislation to align state law more closely with federal statutes
and to set a clearer standard for prosecution.

�These voicemails do cross the line,� Condos wrote in an October 27 email
to lawmakers, which was reviewed by Reuters.

Federal officials considered the threats serious enough to investigate.
After Reuters asked Vermont officials about the October threat, the
Federal Bureau of Investigation began an inquiry into the matter,
according to two local law enforcement officials.

Condos said the email reflected his concern that the intimidation could
escalate to violence. �It also was recognizing the world we are in,� he
said, �and understanding we had to do something.�

Public calls for stronger legislation in Vermont emerged after Reuters
published the October threats in a Nov. 9 story along with details of the
caller�s earlier messages. State authorities declined to pursue the case,
saying the anonymous calls amounted to protected speech and were
�essentially untraceable.� Reuters journalists, however, were able to
contact and interview the man, who admitted to making the threats but
declined to identify himself. He said he believed he had done nothing
wrong.

The week after the Reuters report, Vermont Governor Phil Scott, a
Republican, and state Senator Richard Sears, a Democrat, told reporters
that they would consider changes to state laws governing criminal threats.

Newspaper editorials also urged new legislation. �This case makes it clear
that Vermont law needs to change,� the Manchester Journal said in a Nov.
11 editorial, referring to the threats reported by Reuters against Condos
and his staff.

THREATS VS. FREE SPEECH

The bills in Vermont and other states wouldn�t alter the free-speech
protections guaranteed under the U.S. Constitution to all Americans.
Advocates for the Vermont legislation say the intent is to bring state
laws in line with federal standards, which make it easier to prosecute
threats of violence.

The Vermont bills would sharpen the definition of a criminal threat and
remove several hurdles to prosecution, including a requirement that a
threat must target a specific individual and an additional burden of
proving the suspect has the means and ability to carry out any threatened
violence. Another measure would impose stiffer sentences for threats to
public officials.

�This is about not tying our hands� with statutes that are �too narrow or
unduly restrictive,� says Rory Thibault, a state�s attorney who advised
lawmakers in crafting the legislation.

Striking that balance is delicate in Vermont, which codified its expansive
free-speech protections nearly 250 years ago, more than a decade before
the U.S. Constitution.

In 1777, the independent Vermont Republic enacted a constitution that
guaranteed �a right to freedom of speech, and of writing and publishing
their sentiments� � language that remains in the state�s constitution
today. In 1798, one of the state�s first members of Congress, Matthew
Lyon, was re-elected while jailed under the Sedition Act for criticism of
President John Adams, whom Lyon had described as having �an unbounded
thirst for ridiculous pomp.�

When state lawmakers tried several years ago to make it easier to
prosecute criminal threats, the legislation died amid concerns that it
might infringe on speech rights. But Vermont, like much of America, has
wrestled recently with violent anti-government sentiment, white
nationalism and political extremism, straining its free-speech tradition.

In 2018, Vermont�s Supreme Court overturned the conviction of a Ku Klux
Klan member on two counts of disturbing the peace. The defendant had
placed pro-Klan flyers on the cars of two women, one Black and one
Hispanic. The court ruled the flyers constituted protected speech under
Vermont law.

Last year, the town of Bennington paid $137,500 to a Black state
legislator and apologized publicly for a police failure to sufficiently
respond to racial harassment against her by a self-described white
nationalist. The legislator, Kiah Morris, resigned in 2018.

So far, the criminal-threats legislation has not drawn significant public
opposition, although proponents expect that might change once hearings
begin. The American Civil Liberties Union of Vermont said it is monitoring
the bills but has not taken a position.

Sears, who is also Judiciary Committee Chairman, plans hearings on the
legislation this month. Passing the legislation wouldn�t ensure that
people threatening public officials will go to jail, said Sears, who
sponsored one of the bills. �But we know that if we don�t make these
changes, there�s no chance anything will happen.�

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