NYC man charged with making death threats against Democratic protesters, politicians

By Jonathan Stempel

NEW YORK (Reuters) - A New York City man has been criminally charged with sending death threats on social media, in part because he was unhappy with Democrat Joe Biden being declared the winner of the presidential election, the U.S. Department of Justice said on Tuesday.

Members of the Joint Terrorism Task Force arrested Brian Maiorana, 54, at his Staten Island home on Tuesday after he posted threats directed towards protesters, politicians and law enforcement.

At a late afternoon hearing, a federal judge in Brooklyn ordered Maiorana detained while his lawyer works on a bail proposal, which the government plans to oppose.

The lawyer, federal public defender James Darrow, declined to comment after the hearing.

Prosecutors said Maiorana's online threats began before the election, including when he said on Oct. 19 it had "come to the point where pipe bombs need to be thrown into these mobs of potentially non violent violent protesters."

The complaint said Maiorana posted on Nov. 5 that people claiming to be Democrats should be exterminated, and appeared to respond on Nov. 8 to celebrations of Biden's victory by posting: "All right thinking people need to hit the streets while these scumbags are celebrating and start blowing them away."

Maiorana also appeared to refer that day to New York Democratic Senator Chuck Schumer, the Senate minority leader, by posting: "As the Jew Senator from Jew York said nothing is off the table ... We blow up the FBI building for real. All the alphabet agencies assassination will become the new normal."

At the hearing, Assistant U.S. Attorney Artie McConnell said Maiorana's alleged threats were "not simply idle chatter," citing weapons found at his home through a search warrant.

"This defendant greatly exceeded what can be characterized as political hyperbole," McConnell said.

He also said Maiorana, a registered sex offender in New York, was a flight risk and presented an "irremediable threat" of danger to the community.

(Reporting by Jonathan Stempel in New York; Editing by Aurora Ellis)