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Idaho man, Warren Jones Crazybull, accused of threatening to assassinate Trump 9 times

An Idaho man has been charged with making at least nine threats to assassinate former President Donald Trump, according to a criminal complaint.

Two weeks after the July 31 assassination attempt on Trump in Butler, Pennsylvania, suspect Warren Jones Crazy Bull, 64, called Trump's Mar-a-Lago resort home and threatened to kill him, according to a criminal complaint and affidavit reported by The New York Times. Forbes.

“I am going to drive to this multiple rapist pig Trump's house and defeat him in single combat.”

“Find Trump. I'm going to Bedminster tomorrow. I'm going to take him down and kill him myself,” Crazy Bull said in the phone call, according to the Justice Department's complaint.

Trump National Golf Club is located in Bedminster, New Jersey.

Crazy Bull, of Sandpoint, is accused of calling Trump's Florida home at least nine times and threatening to assassinate him.

Crazy Bull also allegedly made “worrying” threats of violence against Trump on Facebook, using the pseudonym “Tracy Jones.” According to In court documents.

“I will be driving to this multiple rapist pig Trump's home and defeating him in single combat,” the July 31 Facebook post read.

“We're going to attack you, Trump,” another post reportedly read.

According to the indictment, Crazy Bull's social media posts also mentioned Jeffrey Epstein, “John John Kennedy Jr.” and the “shadow government.”

Federal officials said Secret Service agents used T-Mobile cell phone data to track the suspect in Montana.

When investigators interviewed Crazy Bull, Agent said The affidavit states his thought processes were “disorganized” and confused and he appeared to be “paranoid.”

The suspect reportedly told investigators that he had no intention of killing former President Trump, but also claimed that he would not allow Trump to become president again.

According to the affidavit, Crazy Bull accused Trump and former President John F. Kennedy of “losing territory through treaty violations.”

The suspect reportedly told investigators that he had previously been hospitalized for psychiatric treatment.

Crazy Bull was arrested on August 1 and indicted in federal court in Idaho on August 20.

He has pleaded not guilty to one charge of making threats against the former president.

The maximum prison sentence for blackmailing a former president is five years.

The trial is scheduled for October 28th.

The Crazy Bull threat came shortly after suspect Thomas Matthew Crooks shot Trump at a campaign rally in Pennsylvania, striking him in the ear and killing a bystander.

Earlier this month, Secret Service agents found a rifle protruding from bushes on the edge of the Trump International Golf Club in West Palm Beach, Florida. They fired at the suspect, Ryan Wesley Routh, who was arrested shortly after fleeing the scene.

Routh was charged with possession of a firearm by a convicted felon and possession of a firearm with an obliterated serial number.

BlazeNews investigative journalist Steve Baker told Jill Savage and Matthew Peterson:Tonight's Blaze News“Routh has a lengthy criminal history.”

“The most interesting thing is, with all these charges, 74 arrests, how long has he been incarcerated for? None. Zero,” Baker said.

Trump campaign spokesman Steven Chang reiterated that the threats were due to rhetoric promoted by Vice President Kamala Harris and other Democrats.

“There have been two heinous assassination attempts against President Trump that are a direct result of his violent rhetoric,” Chang said. NBC News.

“Unless the Democrats and Kamala Harris apologize for their hateful rhetoric and tone down their attacks that stoked the flames of violence, they will be defending and inciting further bloodshed against President Trump,” Chang asserted.

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