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The View rips Sen. Mike Lee over Minnesota shooter tweets, says he'd ‘be fired instantly' anywhere else

The View rips Sen. Mike Lee over Minnesota shooter tweets, says he'd ‘be fired instantly' anywhere else

Independent5 hours ago

Tearing into Mike Lee on Monday for his tweets that seemingly blamed the politically motivated shootings of Minnesota lawmakers on 'Marxists' and Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, the hosts of The View said that if the GOP senator had 'any other job,' he would 'be fired instantly.'
Less than a day after saying he condemned 'political violence' following the fatal shooting at a protest in his home state of Utah, Lee took to his personal X account labeled @BasedMikeLee – where he regularly peddles far-right disinformation – to mock the tragedy and point the finger at Democrats and leftists.
One tweet, for instance, included an image of alleged shooter Vance Boelter in a mask outside one of his targets' homes alongside the caption: 'Nightmare on Waltz Street.' Another post, which Lee had pinned to his profile until Monday, suggested that left-wing ideology was to blame for the murders.
'Marxism is a deadly mental illness,' he wrote. 'This is what happens when Marxists don't get their way.'
While the Republican senator was hardly alone in pushing baseless conspiracy theories that Boelter – who has been identified as a Trump supporter with heavily conservative views – was a far-left Walz ally, Lee's tweets have drawn more mainstream attention largely because he is a member of Congress.
'I have condemned what Mike Lee did here at home, and I will speak to him about this when I return,' Sen. Amy Klobuchar (D-MN), whose name was included on one of Boelter's lists, told MSNBC. 'And what I'm going to tell him is: This isn't funny.'
Klobuchar, who was close friends with slain former Minnesota House Speaker Melissa Hortman and her husband, added that there was 'no Father's Day for' the two children the deceased couple left behind.
With others calling for Lee to apologize and even resign, the women of The View blasted the conservative lawmaker for his conspiracy-mongering while expressing concern about the 'deep political polarization' and demonization across partisan divides.
'It's like a slow dehumanization of the other – whatever that other is to someone,' co-host Sara Haines said. 'In this instance, it's a political division. And I think people need to check in with themselves. When they hear someone is attacked in their house, if their first response is not feeling gutted and heartbroken without any identifiers… if that was not your first response, you are part of the problem.'
Singling out Lee, Haines said he was 'either mocking what happened' in Minnesota or suggesting something else entirely. After reading off both of his tweets, she noted that Lee sent them out 'within hours of the loss of life and the brutal attack in these people's homes.'
Then, in a somewhat ironic twist considering the recent situation with her now-former ABC News colleague Terry Moran, Haines said that Lee would find himself on the unemployment line if he made these posts anywhere else.
'In any other job, you would be fired instantly,' she declared. 'I don't know what is wrong with our government that someone is not immediately removed or punished.'
Moments later, meanwhile, longtime host Whoopi Goldberg said she was 'not going to pull' her punches while also taking House Speaker Mike Johnson to task for his saying last week that Gavin Newsom should be 'tarred and feathered' after the president suggested the California governor should be arrested amid Los Angeles' anti-ICE protests.
'What are you doing? Y'all are saying we need to come down on the rhetoric and stop doing it, then you don't,' she exclaimed. 'I'm putting this in your hands. I'm putting this in the hands of the people who are supposed to be representing us.'
Goldberg added: 'If you are not going to represent us, then don't run for office because this is not the way to do it … If your first response is not, 'What the hell is going on?' then you should not be running for anything.'
Authorities say that Boelter – who also shot and injured State Sen. John Hiffman and his wife Yvette – 'stalked his victims like prey' and 'shot them in cold blood' while disguised as a police officer. Prosecutors added that while Boelter listed the names of 45 Minnesota state and federal elected officials in notebooks in his car, and he clearly only targeted Democrats, the motivation behind the 'political assassination' wasn't apparent yet.
'I have not seen anything involving some sort of political screed or manifesto that would clearly identify what motivated him,' Acting U.S. Attorney for the District of Minnesota Joe Thompson said at a Monday press conference.

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After Minnesota shooting, some states are more tightly guarding officials' personal information
After Minnesota shooting, some states are more tightly guarding officials' personal information

The Independent

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  • The Independent

After Minnesota shooting, some states are more tightly guarding officials' personal information

Lawmakers in some states are moving to delete their home addresses from online directories and Wisconsin legislators are seeking added security for a session this week after one Minnesota legislator was killed and another wounded in their suburban Minneapolis homes last weekend in what Gov. Tim Walz described as a targeted political attack. Vance Boelter is in federal custody facing murder and stalking charges in the shooting death of former Democratic House Speaker Melissa Hortman and her husband, Mark. Authorities say he also shot and wounded Sen. John Hoffman and his wife Yvette. Boelter, 57, also faces state murder charges. Authorities said Boelter had a list of dozens of state and federal elected officials in Minnesota and meticulous notes on the homes and people he targeted early Saturday. He also stopped by the homes of two other legislators that night, according to police. Authorities say he found their addresses in a variety of internet searches. The Minnesota Legislature's website lists the addresses of members' offices in the state capital of St. Paul, not their home addresses. On Saturday, the North Dakota Legislature's staff agency removed lawmakers' addresses from their biographical webpages as a result of the targeted attacks in Minnesota, Legislative Council Director John Bjornson said. Most North Dakota lawmakers opt to give a home, business or postal box address on their webpage, where the public also can find their email addresses and phone numbers. Removing addresses of elected officials is a difficult decision because they have to be approachable, open and transparent, said Burleigh County Sheriff Kelly Leben, whose county is home to North Dakota's capital city. 'I think it's a balancing act between being a public official and the safety of myself and my family,' the elected county sheriff said. All home addresses for New Mexico legislators were also removed from the Statehouse website as an immediate precaution, said Shawna Casebier, director of the Legislature's legal office. Personal information on the website already had been limited at the discretion of individual lawmakers in the aftermath of drive-by shootings at the homes of four Democratic state and local lawmakers in Albuquerque in 2022 and 2023. In Colorado, at least 31 elected officials have filed requests to remove their personal contact information from a public-facing state campaign finance database called TRACER, which was briefly taken down Saturday so those requests could be fulfilled. 'We did so out of an abundance of caution for the safety of elected officials in an unprecedented political climate,' Colorado Secretary of State Jena Griswold said in a statement. The Colorado development was first reported by Axios. Lawmakers in Wisconsin requested additional security for when the state Assembly meets on Wednesday, said Luke Wolff, spokesperson for Republican Assembly Speaker Robin Vos. Wolff did not detail what was requested or what changes may be made. The Wisconsin Capitol is one of the most open in the country, with public access seven days a week, no metal detectors, screening checkpoints or security badges required to gain entry. There are galleries in both the Senate and Assembly where the public can view legislative debate. Even before the Minnesota shooting, states in recent years have stepped up efforts to shield the personal information of officials in response to high-profile attacks. Oregon One day before the Minnesota killings, Oregon lawmakers passed a bill that would prohibit the Oregon Secretary of State from making the residential addresses of those associated with a candidates' campaign committee viewable by the public on its electronic filing system. The campaign filings would still be viewable online, but home addresses would be redacted, unless the person asks the Secretary of State's office to publish it. A public records request would need to be filed to obtain such addresses. Louisiana Louisiana lawmakers passed a bill last week that adds statewide elected officials and legislators to the list of people who can ask that their personal information be removed from public records and the internet. Certain judges were already on the list. Officials can seek to have home addresses, phone numbers, email addresses, date of birth, marital status, school or daycare of their child, their place of worship or employment location of their spouse removed. Under current law, if person does not comply with the removal request, they can be sued and face up to 90 days in prison or $1,000 fine for the misdemeanor. The measure still needs final approval from Gov. Jeff Landry, one of the Louisiana officials whose private information would be protected. Georgia Georgia legislators passed a law earlier this year to require that home addresses of candidates who file campaign finance reports, including themselves, be redacted from by the state Ethics Commission from public view. The action came after a number of Georgia officials were targeted by swatting incidents in December 2023. Lawmakers also passed a second law which removes the personal phone number, home address, and property or tax records of a judge or their spouse from public view. Records covered include voter registration and corporation records. Illinois The Illinois State Board of Elections stopped publishing the street addresses of candidates for political office on its website last year, spokesperson Matt Dietrich said. Lawmakers had raised concerns after protestors picketed the home of Secretary of State Alexi Giannoulias, the state librarian, over legislation he pushed through the General Assembly that would cut state funding to libraries that ban books. Candidates' addresses remain on elections board documents that are no longer published on the web but accessible via public records request. New Jersey In 2020, a gunman posing as a delivery driver shot and killed the 20-year-old son of U.S. District Judge Esther Salas in New Jersey and injured her husband at their family home. The state legislature passed a law later that year by that exempted the home addresses of current or retired judges, prosecutors and law enforcement officers from disclosure under public records laws. The measure, called Daniel's Law in honor of the judge's son, also allowed officials to ask websites to remove their home addresses. Maryland Maryland enacted a law in 2024 preventing individuals from publishing judges' personal information online after a circuit court judge was shot by a man hours after the judge ruled against him in a divorce case. Judges can submit requests to government entities and private websites to remove information like phone numbers, social security numbers, and personal emails. — Associated Press reporters Claire Rush in Portland, Ore., Jack Dura in Bismarck, N.D., John O'Connor in Springfield, Ill., Jeff Amy in Atlanta, Scott McFetridge in Des Moines, Iowa, Sara Cline in Baton Rouge, La., Scott Bauer in Madison, Wis., Brian Witte in Annapolis, Md. and Morgan Lee in Santa Fe, N.M. contributed to this report.

Social media now main source of news in US, research suggests
Social media now main source of news in US, research suggests

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Social media now main source of news in US, research suggests

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Minnesota assassin's chilling notepad seen for the first time as he makes astonishing poverty claim in court
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Federal prosecutors have shared the chilling notes Vance Boelter carried with him as he allegedly shot dead a state lawmaker and her husband and attempted to kill another legislator and his wife Saturday morning. Boelter, 57, is facing both state and federal charges for the shooting death of Melissa Hortman - the top Democrat in the Minnesota House - and her husband, Mark. He is also suspected of shooting and injuring state Sen. John Hoffman and his wife Yvette at their home a few miles away. He appeared in court on Monday to face the charges for the first time since his apprehension late Sunday night, when he claimed he does not have enough money to afford a private attorney - despite owning seven cars and a house. Prosecutors say Boelter - whose friends describe him as a devout Catholic - planned to target other liberal lawmakers and abortion providers, even making a list of 45 Democrats and other abortion activists in notepads that were recovered from the crime scene. Victim Rep. Hortman appeared on the list, alongside disturbing notes saying she is married to Mark, and the couple has two children, court documents say. Boelter, who was once appointed to serve on a state committee by Gov. Tim Walz, also allegedly included another notation next to Hortman's name reading: 'Big house off golf course, 2 ways to watch from one spot.' The suspect's other alleged victim, Sen. Hoffman, did not appear on the list - but the district he represents was. A separate notebook also listed three websites for companies that sell silicone facemasks, like the one Boelter allegedly wore when he posed as a cop to break into Hortman and Hoffman's homes early Saturday morning. One of the websites describes itself as 'your premier destination for high-end hyper realistic silicone masks,' while another asserts that it 'set[s] a new standard in hyper realistic silicone masks.' 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'He researched his victims and their families. He used the internet and other tools to find their addresses and names, the names of their family members. He conducted surveillance of their homes and took nots of the location of the homes.' It appeared Boelter had been planning the attacks 'for quite some time,' Thompson added. Then, on Saturday morning, he apparently used the information he had gathered as he disguised himself as a police officer - complete with a silicone facemask - to show up at Hortman and Hoffman's homes. He arrived at Hoffman and his wife Yvette's home around 2am in a Ford SUV with police-style lights and a 'POLICE' license plate, and was armed with a flashlight and 9mm handgun. Court documents say Boelter banged on the door to the Hoffman's home and yelled, 'This is the police. Open the door.' But as the suspect spoke with the couple, Yvette told officers she eventually realized the suspect was wearing a mask - and called him out for not being a 'real police officer.' Boelter then allegedly claimed he was there to commit a robbery, at which point, Yvette said, her husband tried to push the suspect out the door. At that point, court documents say, Boelter started firing at the couple - who were later rushed to a local hospital with 'critical gunshot wounds.' Prosecutors also claimed on Monday that Boelter went to the homes of two other legislators on the night of the shootings, intending to inflict more carnage against those on his hitlist, before he arrived at the Hortman's home. One of the other state lawmakers he allegedly targeted was on vacation and the suspect left the other house after police arrived. Meanwhile, Brooklyn Park police deployed officers to the Hortman residence out of precaution once they realized Hoffman was a state legislator. By the time the officers arrived at around 3am, they noticed Boelter's vehicle was already in the driveway, and watched as he fatally struck Mark Hortman, the charging documents claim. Officers encountered Boelter fleeing Hortman's home at 3.35am and exchanged gunfire with him. Chilling photos showed the suspect donning the unsettling costume mask covering his entire head. Yet officers somehow let the suspect slip through their fingers as he escaped the scene on foot. He was allegedly heavily armed at the time. A massive two-day long manhunt for the suspect ensued, with authorities eventually narrowing in on a rural part of Sibley County, where his vehicle had been found. Inside, police recovered three AK-47 assault rifles a 9mm handgun and a cowboy hat Boelter was allegedly seen wearing in surveillance footage. There was even a letter written to the FBI, which said it was written by 'Dr. Vance Luther Boulter' and noted he was 'the shooter at large in Minnesota involved in the 2 shootings.' Officers eventually used a helicopter and a small army of officers on foot to find Boelter, who gave himself up to police after being caught on a resident's trail camera. He was seen in dark clothing, with a backpack and was armed at the time, according to Fox 9. Boelter then gave himself up to police, crawling out before he was handcuffed and taken into custody in a field. He made his first court appearance on Monday, arriving in federal court in St. Paul in an orange prison jumpsuit. Boelter was unshackled as he sat next to his defense attorney and claimed he could not afford a private lawyer because he only has a part-time job that brings in about $540 a week, according to CNN. Yet he also admitted he owned a home and had seven cars in his name, as well as between $20,000 to $30,000 in his bank account, ABC News reports. A federal judge ultimately agreed that the alleged assassin likely would not be able to afford a defense attorney and asked the federal public defenders office to look into his financial situation. In the meantime, the judge ordered the suspect to be held without bail after Assistant US Attorney Bradley Endicott argued he has the intent and capacity to flee, according to NBC News. He is now in the custody of US Marshals, and is due to appear in federal court again on June 27. Boelter was also due to appear in a Hennepin County courtroom at the same time on Monday to face second degree murder and attempted murder charges. There, a state judge set his bail at $5 million. The suspect is now to remain in he custody of US Marshals. If convicted on a federal murder or terrorism charge, Boelter could end up being executed.

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