Advertisement

Trump fan who made racist death threats to Obama and Maxine Waters receives 46-month sentence

Trump Fan Who Made Racist Death Threats to Obama and Maxine Waters Receives 46-Month Sentence
Trump Fan Who Made Racist Death Threats to Obama and Maxine Waters Receives 46-Month Sentence
First, the Syracuse, New York, man repeatedly called a senator’s office in Washington and said he planned to kill former President Barack Obama, using a racial slur in his threat, the authorities said.
Advertisement

A year later, the same man, Stephen J. Taubert, called the California office of Rep. Maxine Waters, a Democrat, and vowed to kill her and her staff members. Once again, he spouted violent rhetoric over the phone, using racist epithets.

Advertisement

On Tuesday, Taubert, 61, was sentenced to 46 months in prison for the phone calls.

His sentence was handed down in the U.S. District Court in Syracuse. It came six weeks after a jury found Taubert guilty of threatening to kill a former United States president, transmitting a threat in interstate commerce and making a threat to influence, impede or retaliate against a federal official.

The jury also found that Taubert chose to make threats against Obama and Waters, two black Democratic Party leaders, because of their race, a distinction that allowed prosecutors to seek an enhanced sentence.

“Racist threats to kill present and former public officials are not protected free speech, but serious crimes,” Grant C. Jaquith, the U.S. attorney for the Northern District of New York, said in a statement Tuesday.

Advertisement

Taubert’s lawyer, Courtenay K. McKeon, declined to comment. But in court Tuesday, she and Taubert both said that he was mentally ill and deserved a more lenient sentence, according to The Syracuse Post-Standard.

Taubert blamed social media and his conservative politics in part for his behavior, the newspaper’s website reported. Taubert, who said in court that he once served in the U.S. Air Force, worked as a janitor at a variety of offices, including some government employers, until 2011, when he had a stroke and had to stop working, according to court papers.

“Probably the worst thing for me is social media,” Taubert said during the sentencing hearing, The Post-Standard reported. “I should stay off of it. When I hear all these people knocking the president, it upsets me.”

Taubert threatened Waters and her staff members last July, when the congresswoman was in a high-profile verbal feud with the Trump administration.

The previous month, White House officials had been heckled at restaurants by protesters opposed to the administration’s “zero tolerance” immigration policy that separated children from their families.

Advertisement

At a rally, Waters, a frequent critic of the White House, commended the protesters and encouraged her supporters to take similar actions. She specifically told them to “show up” wherever they had to, “create a crowd” and “push back.”

Some conservatives took issue with her comments, arguing that “push back” had a physical connotation that was tantamount to inciting assault.

Two days after Waters’ remarks, President Donald Trump joined in the criticism, writing on Twitter that the California congresswoman had called for “harm” to his supporters. Then he warned her to “be careful what you wish for.”

Roughly a month after Trump’s tweet, Taubert called Waters’ office in Los Angeles. Using pejorative slurs for women and African Americans, he said that he planned to attend all of Waters’ public events and vowed to kill her and her staff, prosecutors said.

When asked about that call by police officers, Taubert repeated his racial slur against her, according to court papers. He also called Waters “low IQ”, a comment that mirrored the language of Trump’s tweet.

Advertisement

The call to Waters’ office came 13 months after Taubert made multiple calls to the Washington office of Al Franken, then a Democratic senator from Minnesota. In two of those calls, Taubert said he was planning to go to Washington the next day to “hang” Obama at his home.

Prosecutors said that Taubert had a history of threatening phone calls dating back to 2013, when he said he was going to burn down the NAACP’s building in Baltimore.

In letters of support filed with the court and provided to The New York Times, Taubert’s family and friends said he had apologized several times for the calls. They portrayed him as a man who exercised poor judgment but who had no intention of following through on his threats.

But Judge Glenn T. Suddaby cited Taubert’s history of menacing phone calls as he handed down the sentence.

“They claim he’d never hurt anybody,” Suddaby said in court, The Post-Standard reported. “Mr. Taubert, you’ve repeatedly hurt people with your words.”

Advertisement

Taubert was ordered to pay a $1,000 fine, and will face three years of supervised release after completing his prison term.

A representative for Obama declined to comment. Representatives for Waters did not immediately respond to requests for comment, though in March, after Taubert was found guilty, Waters said in a statement that she was pleased by the conviction.

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.

Advertisement