Authorities in Jupiter, Florida, have detained a 68-year-old local man, Michael Martin Wiseman, who is accused of making serious threats on social media against former President Donald J. Trump and his running mate, Senator J.D. Vance (R-OH). Wiseman allegedly used platforms such as Facebook and Threads to issue these threats.
The arrest comes just after a July 13 campaign rally in Butler, Pennsylvania, where Trump survived an assassination attempt. During that event, a 20-year-old shooter named Thomas Matthew Crooks was fatally shot by a U.S. Secret Service sniper after the would-be assassin fired upwards of eight rounds—hitting the former President in the ear, seriously wounding two others, and killing rallygoer Corey Comperatore.
VIOLENT THREATS.
According to local police, Wiseman praised Crooks in his social media posts. One of the purported Facebook messages read, “Trump and Vance should be murdered before turning us in to [sic] West Russia.” Another troubling post allegedly stated, “I am advocating Trump and Vance’s daughters get raped and THEN tell me they won’t fly their kids out of the USA for an abortion.”
In another instance, a post on Threads allegedly stated, “Why is Trump allowed to be alive? We need to train patriots. Thomas Matthew Crooks deserves a posthumous Congressional Medal of Honor, a stamp, and a national holiday.”
According to a press release issued by the Jupiter Police Department (JPD) on July 19, detectives investigated Wiseman’s social media accounts and confirmed multiple threats against Trump and Vance, as well as threats of bodily harm toward their families. The JPD collaborated with the United States Secret Service (USSS) and the Palm Beach County State Attorney’s Office during the investigation. Wiseman was apprehended without incident.
Following his arrest, Wiseman was arraigned on July 20. Prosecutors have argued for him to remain in pretrial detention, citing that he poses a threat to the community and highlighting the serious nature of the charges, which include a felony in the first degree. Under Florida law, the crime Wiseman is charged with typically carries a potential sentence of up to 40 years in prison.