MINNEAPOLIS — A Minneapolis man was arrested Thursday after federal prosecutors said he made online threats against Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers and against a person who supported ICE during the federal crackdown in Minnesota.
Kyle Wagner, 37, is charged in a criminal complaint with violating cyberstalking and interstate communications laws for allegedly using his Instagram account to dox a ''pro-ICE individual'' by publishing a phone number, birth month and year, and suburban Detroit address. The complaint says Wagner later admitted that he doxed the victim's parents' house.
The complaint also details several online posts in which prosecutors say Wagner threatened immigration officers.
Court records in Detroit, Michigan, where the case was filed, did not list an attorney who could speak on Wagner's behalf. The complaint was filed on Feb. 3, and unsealed Thursday.
Attorney General Pamela Bondi alleged in a statement that Wagner doxed and threatened law enforcement officers, claimed an affiliation with antifa and ''encouraged bloodshed in the streets.''
And at the White House on Thursday, press secretary Karoline Leavitt held up Wagner's photo at the daily briefing and said such conduct by ''left-wing agitators'' won't go unpunished.
''And if people are illegally obstructing our federal law enforcement operations, if they are targeting, doxing, harassing and vilifying ICE agents, they are going to be held accountable like this individual here who, again, is a self-proclaimed member of antifa. He is a domestic terrorist, and he will be held accountable in the United States,'' Leavitt told reporters.
President Donald Trump announced in September that he would designate antifa a ''major terrorist organization.'' Antifa, short for ''anti-fascists,'' is an umbrella term for far-left-leaning militant groups and is not a singular entity. It consists of groups that resist fascists and neo-Nazis, especially at demonstrations.