Disgraced journalist charged over bomb
threats to U.S. Jewish groups
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[March 04, 2017]
By Joseph Ax
NEW YORK (Reuters) - A disgraced former
journalist was charged on Friday with making a wave of bomb threats to
Jewish organizations while posing as an ex-girlfriend in retaliation for
breaking up with him.
Juan Thompson, 31, was arrested in St. Louis, the first case to emerge
from a federal investigation into a surge of threats against Jewish
Community Centers (JCCs) and schools that has rattled American Jews.
Federal prosecutors described a vicious, months-long harassment campaign
in which Thompson allegedly used fake email accounts to accuse the woman
of possessing child pornography, driving drunk and, finally, making bomb
threats targeting Jewish groups.
U.S. authorities are examining more than 100 threats made against JCCs
by phone this year, which appear unrelated to the Thompson allegations.
Federal Bureau of Investigation Director James Comey met with Jewish
leaders on Friday to discuss the ongoing investigation.
A criminal complaint unsealed in Manhattan accused Thompson of
threatening organizations including a Jewish museum in New York and the
Anti-Defamation League (ADL). All occurred after the first flood of
phone threats in early January.
The hoax threats against JCCs have stoked fears of a resurgence in
anti-Semitism and forced the evacuation of many centers, including some
with day care for young children.
Prosecutors said Thompson wanted to portray his ex-girlfriend as an
anti-Semite, a characterization he repeated on Twitter. It was unclear
if he shared those sentiments, and his recent posts did not include
explicit anti-Semitism.
But the ADL said he had been "on the radar" due to his past activities,
including "rants against white people."
Thompson was a reporter for the Intercept, a news website, until he was
fired last year for allegedly inventing sources and quotes.
Intercept editor Betsy Reed said the website was "horrified" by his
arrest.
Thompson made an initial appearance on Friday in U.S. court in St. Louis
on one count of cyber stalking, where a judge ordered that he remain in
federal custody, according to media reports. He is likely to be
extradited to New York to face prosecution.
His court-appointed lawyer was not immediately available for comment.
'NASTY RACIST WHITE GIRL'
The Intercept said in February 2016 that Thompson employed a fake email
account to pose as a source and try to hide his fabrications.
After his girlfriend broke up with him in July 2016, prosecutors said,
Thompson used the same technique during months of increasingly vicious
harassment.
A day after the breakup, Thompson sent an email purportedly from a news
producer to her boss at a New York social service company, according to
the complaint. The email claimed she had been pulled over for drunk
driving and sued for spreading a sexually transmitted disease.
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The residence of Juan M Thompson is seen after it was searched by
police in connection with his arrest on charges of bomb threats made
against Jewish organizations across the United States, in St. Louis,
Missouri, U.S. March 3, 2017. REUTERS/Lawrence Bryant
In the following weeks, the woman received messages from a supposed
relative of Thompson, falsely claiming Thompson was on his deathbed
after a shooting.
Thompson threatened to publicize nude photos of her and told the
U.S. Secret Service on Twitter she had threatened the president,
prosecutors said. He also sent an anonymous message to a national
children's welfare organization claiming she had child pornography
on her phone.
In late January, Thompson began emailing bomb threats to Jewish
groups using his own name and then accused her on Twitter of having
framed him. He also sent threats pretending to be her, according to
the complaint.
One email called for a "Jewish Newtown," in a reference to the 2012
massacre of 26 children and educators at a Connecticut school.
On Feb. 24, he posted on Twitter, "Know any good lawyers? Need to
stop this nasty/racist #whitegirl I dated who sent a bomb threat in
my name."
The ex-girlfriend, whom authorities have not named, could not be
reached for comment. Thompson referred to her by name on Twitter,
but Reuters has declined to identify her as an alleged stalking
victim.
Authorities are still investigating the JCC threats as well as the
desecration of headstones at Jewish cemeteries in Philadelphia, St.
Louis and Rochester, New York.
St. Louis police will question Thompson about the graveyard
vandalism, the St. Louis Post-Dispatch reported.
In a statement, Doron Krakow, the president of the JCC Association
of North America, said the group was "gratified" by the arrest.
"We trust that the perpetrators behind all of the threats will be
swiftly identified and brought to justice," Krakow said.
(Additional reporting by Jonathan Allen and Gina Cherelus in New
York and Dustin Volz in Washington; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama and
Jeffrey Benkoe)
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