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?????????????????????????????????????????????????Friday, March 3, 2017
Officials Arrest Former Reporter In 8 Bomb Threats On Jewish Community
The FBI is searching for more suspects in the dozens of calls to Jewish institutions around the nation.
Juan
M. Thompson, shown here in a screenshot from a YouTube video filmed for
The Intercept, was arrested in Missouri on Friday in connection with
threats on Jewish community centers across the country.
- Juan M. Thompson was arrested in Missouri on a federal cyberstalking charge.
- He allegedly made eight bomb threats to Jewish institutions. The FBI is still looking for suspects in dozens of other incidents.
- In February 2016, he was fired as a reporter from The Intercept for falsifying sources and quotes.
A former journalist is accused of making eight bomb threats to Jewish institutions in an attempt to harass a former girlfriend, according to the FBI and the publication.
The Federal Bureau of Investigation worked with the New York Police Department and
New York State Police to arrest Juan Thompson Friday morning in St.
Louis, Missouri, on one count of cyberstalking, according to an FBI press release. Thompson,
31, allegedly stalked a woman by making the threats in her name to
Jewish community centers and the Anti-Defamation League’s New York
headquarters, court documents said. The charge carries a maximum of five years in prison.
The FBI is still investigating the waves of calls to Jewish community
centers across the country, spokeswoman Samantha Shero told The
Huffington Post. They have not identified the suspect or suspects who
made the more than 100 threats.
Thompson’s first alleged threat came nine days after the first wave of
bomb threats hit JCCs across the country. The majority of those bomb
threats ― which as of Friday add up to at least 103 at 77 Jewish
community centers and nine Jewish schools ― have come in five waves.
Thompson made his final threat on Feb. 20, according to court documents.
Twelve centers received threats that same day, but authorities consider
the cases unrelated.
Thompson originally began harassing the woman in July, after she ended
their relationship, according to the FBI’s allegations. On July 27,
Thompson allegedly sent an email to the victim’s employer at a social
service organization in the greater New York area, claiming that she’d
been pulled over for drunk driving and was being sued for spreading
sexually transmitted diseases.
In October, anonymous emails sent to the woman’s employer, and later
traced to Thompson, said she had sexually transmitted diseases and
accused her of having child pornography, the FBI complaint said. As
early as November, investigators with the St. Louis Police Department
and the NYPD began interviewing Thompson about the accusations.
Thompson then made eight bomb threats to Jewish institutions over the course of a month, authorities said.
Sometimes he’d make threats in his own name; other times, he’d make
them in the victim’s name and then claim she was trying to frame him.
According to the FBI, he sent the first threat via email to the Jewish
History Museum in Manhattan on Jan. 28.
On Feb. 1, he allegedly threatened a Jewish school in Manhattan twice,
and another Jewish school in Farmington Hills, Michigan, once. He
allegedly threatened a JCC in Manhattan on Feb. 7; a JCC in San Diego on
Feb. 20; and sent an email to the Council on American-Islamic Relations
to threaten a Jewish center in Dallas on Feb. 21.
Thompson is also accused of sending an email to the ADL on Feb. 21
saying the woman “is behind the bomb threats against Jews. She lives in
NYC and is making more bomb threats tomorrow.” The next day, the ADL got
a phone call from a person claiming that “explosive material” had been
placed at its office in Manhattan, according to the FBI.
Court documents mentioned a tweet from Feb. 24, in which Thompson
accuses “this nasty/racist #whitegirl” of sending “a bomb threat in my
name.”
Know any good lawyers? Need to stop this nasty/racist #whitegirl I dated who sent a bomb threat in my name & wants me to be raped in jail.
“The defendant allegedly caused havoc, expending hundreds of hours of
police and law enforcement resources to respond and investigate these
threats,” New York Police Commissioner James P. O’Neill said.
In February of 2016, Thompson was fired from his job as a reporter at
The Intercept, an online investigative news publication launched in
2014, after the outlet discovered he had fabricated quotes.
“An investigation into Thompson’s reporting turned up three instances in
which quotes were attributed to people who said they had not been
interviewed,” Editor-in-Chief Betsy Reed said in a statement at the
time.
In one instance, Thompson featured a person in a story who he said was the cousin of Dylann Roof, the white supremacist who murdered nine members of a church congregation in South Carolina.
The man Thompson claimed to have quoted ― Scott Roof ― doesn’t exist. A retraction at the top of Thompson’s article now reads:
“After speaking with two members of Dylann Roof’s family, The Intercept
can no longer stand by the premise of this story. Both individuals said
that they do not know of a cousin named Scott Roof.”
In a statement Friday, The Intercept said it was “horrified” to learn of
the charges against a former employee. “These actions are heinous
should be fully investigated and prosecuted,” the publication said.
Thompson’s arrest comes after groups including the ADL called for the federal government to broaden its investigation into
the threats. The FBI and the Department of Justice told HuffPost
previously that they are investigating possible civil rights violations
in connection with the threats, but officials refused to comment any
further.
There have been more than 100 bomb threats made to over 80 Jewish institutions since January. HuffPost is tracking the threats here: