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Woman guilty in threats case after 2020 presidential election

Writer: January 6th NewsJanuary 6th News

Updated: Oct 22, 2024

Robert Snell | The Detroit News | March 2, 2023



A New Hampshire woman pleaded guilty Thursday to texting threats to Monica Palmer, the chairwoman of the Wayne County Board of Canvassers, following the 2020 presidential election and sending photos of a bloody mutilated female body.


Katelyn Jones, 25, a former Olivet resident who lives in Epping, faces up to 10 years in federal prison and will be sentenced July 11 in federal court in Detroit.


She was charged in December 2020 following an FBI investigation that probed lingering fallout from President Donald Trump's defeat and baseless allegations about voting irregularities. The criminal complaint and an FBI affidavit filed in federal court described threats leveled at Palmer after the Republican canvasser voted against certifying the 2020 presidential election results.


Palmer faced intense scrutiny over her decision to decline certification, then certify and then attempt to rescind her vote on the final certification of roughly 878,000 votes in Michigan's largest county.


Jones is among a handful of federal cases filed in recent years involving extremism targeting public officials. She pleaded guilty one day after prosecutors accused a man from the Adrian area of threatening to kill Jewish members of state government, including Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel.


In the Jones case, prosecutors said threats started within days of the 2020 election.

On Nov. 18, Palmer received multiple threatening texts from an unknown person who utilized a cellphone with a 269 area code.


"Damn it was not hard finding all of your information disgusting racist b----," one text read. "I don't tolerate people like you, in fact I consider you to be a terrorist and do you know what happens to terrorist," the text read, adding Palmer's name.


“The messages were immediately followed by two graphic photographs of a bloody, deceased, nude, mutilated woman, lying on the ground,” FBI Special Agent Emily Munchiando wrote in the affidavit.


Investigators traced the phone number to the app TextMe Inc. Company records showed the 269 phone number account was created 10 minutes before Palmer received the first threatening message.


FBI agents tracked the IP address used to create the TextMe account. The IP address subscriber was Jones' mother, Linda Jones, in New Hampshire, according to the affidavit.

"Therefore, the account that used (269) xxx-xx68 that sent threatening text messages to (Palmer) was created at Linda Jones' residence," the FBI agent wrote.


Jones also posted comments on an Instagram account associated with Palmer, saying the election official's young daughter was "beautiful" and that it would “be a shame if something happened to her.”


Palmer also received threatening messages on her Instagram page on Nov. 18 from a user named "_etfere." The user posted Palmer's address, phone number and husband's phone number.


"Feel free to leave these disgusting racist (sic) a nice little message on their voicemail or for more fun stop by their house," the post read.


"Racist terrorist b----," read another post.


The FBI agent concluded the texts messages and Instagram posts were sent by the same person because they used similar terms, including the words terrorist and racist, and identified Palmer's daughter and husband.


"Both threatened harm to (Palmer's) daughter," the agent wrote.


Investigators discovered the Instagram account was linked to a second account that featured photographs of a woman. Agents concluded the photos were of Jones based on the number of photos and other information and the pictures matched her Michigan driver's license photo, according to the affidavit.


The FBI started surveilling Katelyn Jones on Dec. 10, almost one month after the threats against Palmer.


That morning, outside Linda Jones' home, an FBI agent spotted a white woman wearing a blue hooded sweatshirt with the hood covering her face. The woman appeared to be Katelyn Jones, according to the affidavit.


Agents raided the New Hampshire home and found Katelyn Jones inside the house.

She admitted creating the TextMe account and using it to send the threatening texts, according to the affidavit.


Katelyn Jones also said she was the only person who used the Instagram account and admitted posting threats because Palmer was "interfering with the election," according to the FBI agent.


After the election, Palmer revealed that she had received threatening messages that she forwarded to Grosse Pointe Woods police and the FBI.


"Not only has my home and my family been threatened, my employer has been threatened," Palmer said. "There are businesses that I shared a Tweet months ago for a giveaway for a wedding dress. That bridal shop is being harassed and threatened at this point. Where does it end?"


Read the original story at The Detroit News

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