Bet
he gets fired for this
US
Department of Justice news release, edited for clarity
U.S. Attorney Justin Herdman's comments on recent Ohio cases
involving political violence
US Justice Department photo |
….We are here to announce
the unsealing of a federal complaint against James Reardon, age 20, of New
Middletown, Ohio. He is charged with one count of making threats using a
facility of interstate commerce.
….I want to start by
thanking the community. This case is the result of a concerned citizen who took
the time to point out Mr. Reardon’s social media activity to a New Middletown
Police Officer. This case is just one of several over the past few weeks that
are the product of our friends and neighbors seeing something, and then saying
something.
For example, a few weeks
ago, Timothy Ireland was indicted on firearms and threat charges after a
private citizen alerted law enforcement. And at the beginning of this month,
Vincent Armstrong pleaded guilty to charges related to a planning an attack on a
bar in Toledo. That case started with a tip from a concerned citizen to Toledo
police.
There are several more examples and they illustrate the fact that these type of cases rely on very two important people – a concerned citizen and a responsive law enforcement officer. Fortunately, we have both of those in abundance in northern Ohio.
There are several more examples and they illustrate the fact that these type of cases rely on very two important people – a concerned citizen and a responsive law enforcement officer. Fortunately, we have both of those in abundance in northern Ohio.
I want to thank the men
and women who make up our police departments, and some of their leadership are here
today….
Now let me speak generally
to those who are advocates for white supremacy, or white nationalism. I
am talking directly to you. The Constitution protects your right to
speak, your right to think, and your right to believe. If you want to waste the
blessings of liberty by going down a path of hatred and failed ideologies, that
is your choice.
Democracy allows you to
test those ideas in the public forum. If you want to submit your beliefs
to the American people and get their reaction, please be my guest.
Keep this in mind, though. Thousands and thousands of
young Americans already voted with their lives to ensure that this same message
of intolerance, death, and destruction would not prevail - you can count their
ballots by visiting any American cemetery in North Africa, Italy, France, or
Belgium and tallying the white headstones.
You can also recite the many names of civil rights advocates who
bled and died in opposing supporters of those same ideologies of hatred.
Their voices may be distant, but they can still be heard.
Mug shot for James Reardon, subject of herdman's remarks |
Your right to free speech
does not automatically mean that people will agree with you. In fact, you
have an absolute God-given and inalienable right to be on the losing end of
this argument.
What you don’t have,
though, is the right to take out your frustration at failure in the political
arena by resorting to violence.
You don’t have any right to threaten the lives and well-being of
our neighbors. They have an absolute God-given and inalienable right to
live peacefully, to worship as they please, to be free from fear that they
might become a target simply because of the color of their skin, the country of
their birth, or the form of their prayer.
Threatening to kill Jewish
people, gunning down innocent Latinos on a weekend shopping trip, planning and
plotting to perpetrate murders in the name of a nonsense racial theory, sitting
to pray with God-fearing people who you execute moments later - those actions
don’t make you soldiers, they make you criminals. Law enforcement doesn’t
go to war with cowards who break the law, we arrest them and send them to
prison.
As I said, this case was
made by a concerned member of the public and a responsive police officer.
That’s all it takes to stop you. The men and women of our community are
allied with law enforcement. And every single member of law enforcement
took an oath to protect and defend the Constitution of the United States
against all enemies, foreign and domestic. Many of us have taken that
oath several times - as police officers, federal agents, prosecutors, military
members, and elected officials.
Together, we represent the
absolute best of what America has to offer. Our skin is every color you
can imagine, our families come from a hundred different countries and a hundred
different faiths. What makes us different doesn’t split us apart,
though. Those differences are insignificant compared to what is the same
about us - we are united in our commitment to each other, to our families, and
to our communities. We are the living embodiment of everything you say is
impossible.
Together, we are united to
ensure that you commit no further acts of violence in the name of your
beliefs. When you wake up tomorrow morning, no matter what time, I want
you to remember something. You can’t set your alarm clock early enough to
beat us out of bed. The men and women of law enforcement don’t wake up.
We never went to sleep. We are always awake. And arm in arm with
the public, when your hatred leads you to break the law, we will do everything
we can to be there to stop you.