Shropshire Star

Man, 68, charged with making death threats over Donald Trump editorials

Robert Chain said he would shoot Boston Globe employees, prosecutors said.

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Donald Trump

A man upset about The Boston Globe’s coordinated editorial response to president Donald Trump’s attacks on the media was arrested on Thursday on charges he threatened to kill the newspaper’s journalists.

Robert Chain began calling the Boston newsroom after the Globe appealed to newspapers across the country to condemn what it called a “dirty war against the free press”, prosecutors said.

On August 16, the day scores of editorials were published, Chain, 68, of the Encino section of Los Angeles, told a Globe employee that he was going to shoot employees in the head at 4 o’clock, according to court documents.

Boston Globe threats
FBI agents remove evidence from the home of Robert Chain in the Encino area of Los Angeles (David Crane/Los Angeles Daily News via AP)

That threat from a blocked phone number prompted a police response and increased security at the newspaper’s offices.

Chain said he would continue threatening the Globe until it stops its “treasonous and seditious” attacks on Mr Trump, according to a court complaint.

Several times he called Globe employees the “enemy of the people,” a characterisation of journalists that Mr Trump has used repeatedly.

Newsrooms have received threats for years and rarely do they result in charges.

However, sensitivity has been heightened since a gunman with a long-running grudge against the Capital Gazette newspaper in Annapolis, Maryland, killed five employees there in June.

Federal officials pledged to continue to go after anyone who puts others in fear of their lives.

“In a time of increasing political polarisation, and amid the increasing incidence of mass shootings, members of the public must police their own political rhetoric. Or we will,” Massachusetts US Attorney Andrew Lelling said.

Federal prosecutors asked that Chain be detained because of the seriousness of the threats combined with the fact that more than 20 guns and hundreds of rounds of ammunition were seized from his house.

Some guns were in plain sight, such as a shotgun by the front door, while others were hidden, Assistant US Attorney Matt Rosenbaum said.

Mr Rosenbaum acknowledged there was no evidence Chain, who is retired from the international sales and trade business, had planned to go to Boston.

A federal magistrate rejected claims that Chain, who has no criminal record, was a flight risk or a danger that required him to be held behind bars.

Chain was ordered to appear in a Boston courtroom by September 24 to answer to charges of making threatening communications in interstate commerce, which calls for up to five years in prison.

Jane Bowman, a spokeswoman for the Globe, said the newspaper is grateful for law enforcement’s efforts to protect its staffers and track down the source of the threats.

“While it was unsettling for many of our staffers to be threatened in such a way, nobody – really, nobody – let it get in the way of the important work of this institution,” she said in an email.

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