Woman Who Threatened to Kill President Trump Let Off the Hook by DC Grand Jury

Make note of the judge in this case. He is an Obama appointee who has repeatedly tried to block Trump deportations.

WUSA News reports:

Grand jury refuses charges against woman accused of threatening President Trump, attorney saysA grand jury has refused charges against a New York woman accused of threatening President Donald Trump, her attorney said in a court filing Monday.D.C. District Court Chief Judge Jeb Boasberg released 49-year-old Nathalie Rose Jones last week to GPS monitoring over the objection of prosecutors, who argued she’d made violent threats toward Trump. Boasberg overturned a ruling by a magistrate judge who’d ordered Jones detained following her arrest in D.C. last month.On Monday, Jones’ attorney, assistant federal public defender Mary Petras, asked Boasberg to remove her remaining release conditions – saying a grand jury in D.C. had declined to indict her.“A grand jury has now found no probable cause to indict Ms. Jones on the charged offenses,” Petras wrote. “Given that finding, the weight of the evidence is weak. The government may intend to try again to obtain an indictment, but the evidence has not changed and no indictment is likely.”Grand juries nearly always return indictments in federal cases because they are tasked with deciding only whether there is a reasonable basis to support charging a crime, a much lower burden than in criminal trials, and because they typically made their decisions after hearing evidence only from the government. Under federal law, an indictment is required within 30 days of arrest for any felony charge prosecutors want to bring.Jones, who previously worked as a pharmacist in Indiana, came to federal investigators’ attention in early August when she allegedly began posting threatening messages toward Trump online. In a Facebook post on Aug. 6 in which she tagged the FBI, Jones wrote she was “willing to sacrificially kill this POTUS by disemboweling him and cutting out his trachea.” In an email sent Aug. 14, Jones allegedly wrote she was “available to kill this man” in apparent reference to Trump. According to a detention memo, the email was sent to “several military, pharmaceutical and governmental recipients.”

Tags: Crime, District of Columbia, Trump Derangement Syndrome

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