NEW YORK (AP) — A New York man has pleaded guilty to sending death threats to the state attorney general and the Manhattan judge who presided over former President Donald Trump’s civil fraud case, prosecutors said Thursday. Tyler Vogel, 26, of Lancaster, admitted to one felony count of making a terroristic threat and one misdemeanor count of making a threat of mass harm on Wednesday in state Supreme Court, according to Acting Erie County District Attorney Michael Keane’s office. Vogel had sent text messages late last month threatening New York Attorney General Letitia James and Judge Arthur Engoron with “death and physical harm” if they did not comply with his demands to “cease action” in the Trump case, according to a complaint filed in a court in Lancaster, a suburb east of Buffalo. State police said in the complaint that Vogel used a paid online background website to obtain private information about James and Engoron and that this “confirmed intentions to follow through with the threats were his demands not met.” |
ACWF Launches Online Lessons for Women Internet UsersFrom masterpiece to marketplace, creative museum souvenirs go viral among Chinese youthHuang Xiaowei Joins Panel Discussion of 3rd Session of 13th CPPCC National CommitteeACWF President Stresses Greater Efforts in Lifting All Impoverished Women out of PovertyACWF Calls on Women to Learn from Women Role Models in AntiACWF President Presides over Symposium on Women and Children's Development in the 14th FiveACWF Launches Women Volunteers' ActionTwo SessionsDelegations parade into stadium during opening ceremony of 4th Asian Para Games in HangzhouACWF Honors 3 Women Dedicated to Curbing COVID