
Karen Warren / AP
WASHINGTON â U.S. Rep. Jasmine Crockett said in a statement Thursday someone showed up at her D.C. office and made âwhite supremacist threats and hand gestures.â
The outspoken Dallas Democrat said everyone is safe and thanked Capitol Police for responding swiftly. She did not provide further details about the person who made the threats or say whether the individual was arrested.
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Crockett said political violence cannot become normalized and criticized President Donald Trump for statements he has made.
âWeâre living in a time where political violence is being fueled from the very top,â Crockett said.
Trump this week accused half a dozen Democratic lawmakers of sedition âpunishable by DEATHâ after the lawmakers â all veterans of the armed services and intelligence community â released a video calling on U.S. military members to uphold the Constitution and defy âillegal orders.â
On Thursday, Trump reposted to social media an article about the video, adding his own commentary that it was âreally bad, and Dangerous to our Country.â
âSEDITIOUS BEHAVIOR FROM TRAITORS!!!â Trump went on. âLOCK THEM UP???â He called for the lawmakersâ arrest and trial, adding in a separate post that it was âSEDITIOUS BEHAVIOR, punishable by DEATH.â
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Trump also reposted more than a dozen comments from other accounts criticizing Democrats, including one that stated âHANG THEM GEORGE WASHINGTON WOULD !!â
Asked during a White House briefing on Thursday about the intent of Trumpâs messages, press secretary Karoline Leavitt instead honed in on the Democratsâ message, which she posited âperhaps is punishable by law.â
Leavitt went on to say that any incitement to âdefy the chain of command, not to follow lawful ordersâ is âa very dangerous thing for sitting members of Congress to do, and they should be held accountable, and thatâs what the president wants to see.â
Democrats have condemned the presidentâs posts as escalating political tensions in the country and fueling potential violence against elected leaders.
âWhen the President of [the] United States spreads hate and lies, when he targets his political opponents, when he openly calls for the death of sitting Members of Congress, he is putting a literal target on our backs,â Crockett said in her statement.
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She also said Thursdayâs incident at her office illustrates why she needs security, as speaking out for her beliefs results in louder and more dangerous threats.
âI will continue to show up for the people of Texasâ 30th Congressional District,â Crockett said. âBut we cannot pretend that this is normal. When leaders promote hate, hate shows up â sometimes right at our door.â
â This report contains material from the Associated Press
Joseph Morton covers the intersection of business and politics in the Washington Bureau. Before joining The News, Joseph worked for CQ Roll Call and the Omaha World-Herald. He graduated from the University of Missouri School of Journalism.
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This story, originally published in The Dallas Morning News, is reprinted as part of a collaborative partnership between The Dallas Morning News and Texas Metro News. The partnership seeks to boost coverage of Dallasâ communities of color, particularly in southern Dallas.
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