A Texas man accused of threatening to kill the ice agents and damage the secretary of the DHS Kristi called in court after a judge ordered him to stay in jail.
Robert King, 35, cried after the United States magistrate, Judge Renee Toliver, ruled that it was a risk of flight and a risk to the community of a Dallas audience on Wednesday afternoon, Fox News reported.
King was arrested in McKinney, Texas, on March 29, after allegedly publishing threats to ice agents and the name on Facebook.
“I really hope, and I mean this with all my heart, that Kristi Call finds a horrible and agonizing disappearance, I hope he is judged in a criminal war court with the rest of the Nazis when all this ends and I hope he is torn in a generous article of PBS to PBS Newhour, orientation to federal attackers.
“Nothing less for a Nazi slag,” he continued.
“This is America now a Nazi fascist state. Askems.”
He allegedly threatened that he was “opening fire” in any ice agent he saw, describing them as “a secret police force without real legal authority,” in a second Facebook post.
“I just want to double what I said the other day: if ICE arrives in your neighborhood, F-King shoots them and kills them. There is no mercy for the Gestapo,” hey, in a follow-up post a couple of days, according to prosecutors.
King’s social networks threats came to light after a notice to the FBI National Councils line, a government lawyer said the duration of Wednesday.
At the time of doing the threats, King lived with his sister and brother -in -law who currently serves as a police officer and is a former customs and border protection agent.
As a result of the threats that come to light, he was expelled from the house, Fox News reported.
He was accused of transmitting interstate threats and will remain in the arrest of Kaufman County, although his lawyer argued that he had no previous positions or weapons.
King was looking for treatment for mental health problems, including suicidal thoughts and depression at that time, said his lawyer.
The judge rejected his lawyer’s commitment to transfer it to another center where he has access to mental health and other medications.