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Trans activist arrested for threatening to KILL pro-Trump crusader Nancy Mace and her kids

Trans activist arrested for threatening to KILL pro-Trump crusader Nancy Mace and her kids

Daily Mail​16-05-2025

A teenage trans activist has been accused of threatening to assassinate Nancy Mace, the most outspoken lawmaker in Congress on transgender issues.
Samuel Theodore Cain, 19, of Greenville, South Carolina, was arrested and charged with threatening the life of a public official on Thursday, the State Law Enforcement Division (SLED) announced.
Cain, who goes by 'Roxie Wolfe' online, posted in April: 'I'm going to assassinate (redacted) with a gun and I'm being 100% dead a**,' according to a copy of the arrest warrant.
The redacted part said: 'Representative Nancy Mace,' images of the original X post show.
Mace, 47, a high-profile Republican congresswoman from South Carolina, said she would attend the first court hearing in person.
She wrote on X on Friday morning: 'Heading to Greenville, SC for the bond hearing of the man in a dress who threatened to kill me. Real women stand together. Real men stand up to protect women.'
The bond hearing was scheduled for 9:30am local time Friday.
Cain faces a potential maximum of five years in prison and a $5,000 fine.
Mace has tackled transgender issues head-on more than anybody else in Congress.
She has fought transgender participation in school sports and passed a ban on trans women's bathroom use of female facilities at the Capitol.
As Mace has cracked down on pro-trans policies, there have been angry and even violent reactions at times.
'The radical tr*ns movement is no longer just about pronouns,' Mace wrote in one of her many social media posts about the death threat and subsequent arrest.
'It's about silencing anyone who dares to speak the truth. With threats. With violence. With hate.'
Mace told Fox News that Cain even threatened to kill her children.
When contacted by the FBI regarding the death threats, Cain allegedly confessed to authoring the post, but added that he 'didn't mean it.'
In another post with a mugshot of Cain, Mace wrote: 'Samuel Theodore Cain is first trans activist in country to be arrested for death threats against us, thanks to Capitol Police and SLED.'
'Roxie was 'dead*ss' arrested. We'll let the photo stand for itself because this individual is obviously unwell in more ways than one. Hopefully they have makeup wipes in prison.'
Mace has shared that her crusade is mostly about defending women's rights. A survivor of sexual assault, she openly talks about her belief in protecting spaces for females.
South Carolina Congresswoman Nancy Mace has shared an extraordinary clip of a heated exchange with a trans activist over her use of the term 'tr**ny.' The activist picked up a pot plant and appeared to be contemplating throwing it after Mace disagreed with her
'Real men don't threaten or hurt women,' she posted about Cain. 'Although, you obviously wouldn't know that. You also apparently didn't know actions have consequences.'
Photos taken of Cain's X account, which has since been deleted, show that he supported Democrats and liberal causes.
One image shows Cain holding up two 'I voted' stickers in November claiming, 'did my civic duty today and voted for Kamala twice.'
Posts he made after writing the death threat show he was afraid of the online backlash he received for his post, and he expressed dismay he could be doxxed.
It is not the first time Mace has had a violent encounter with the trans community.
In December, Mace claims she was 'physically accosted' by a trans activist. The individual was later arrested by Capitol Police and the Republican wore a sling over her arm and shoulder for days after.
Mace has also taken on Rep. Sarah McBride, D-Del., the first trans member of Congress.
She called the Democrat a 'man' repeatedly and admitted her bathroom ban was specifically to target McBride.
Keen on enforcing her bathroom ban, Mace and fellow Republican Lauren Boebert even chased a person into a women's restroom thinking they were trans, though it turned out she wasn't.
Mace has also had several other high-profile run-ins with trans activists, including a recent incident where one individual appeared to almost throw a plant at Mace.
The spat came at a constituent event where Mace used the word 'tr***y,' causing a crowd member to confront the Republican over the 'derogatory' phrase.

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Trump Cabinet secretary to get swanky new setup as major agency moves headquarters out of D.C.
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Trump Cabinet secretary to get swanky new setup as major agency moves headquarters out of D.C.

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McKee put the bill in limbo temporarily, saying he will not sign nor veto the $14.3 billion state budget as it stands because 'it taxes people and raises fees unnecessarily.' 'At this moment in time there wasn't a need to raise taxes on anyone,' he said, not fully ruling out future taxes on part-time residents. Gov. McKee's move isn't the same as a veto and the bill can move forward if revised to his liking. If the budget had been vetoed, the General Assembly would have to go back into session to override the veto, or make amendments to the budget. 'This won't affect just the wealthy, everyone will be affected by this,' Masterson, the Watch Hill resident, said of the potential new tax. 'It's a lot of old families here and for years it was a sort of a quiet sleepy town, most people have been coming here for generations with their parents. 'It' sort of changed a little a little bit, new blood has been coming into the area, the Swifties, which is actually fantastic for our summer tourism industry, because they come to see Taylor's house then they stay the weekend.' Masterson says tourism industry workers will feel the burn if homeowners start to flee the area because of the big tax. 'There's not a lot of winter industry around here so when the summer crowd comes in it's supporting a lot of a lot of people,' he says. 'This will hurt them too if no one is here.' If a law does pass in the future, Swift will face her own six-figure tax on her $17 million Watch Hill estate. Swift has famously owned the mansion in the upmarket beach town since 2013 and spends July 4th there nearly every year. Under the guise of helping Rhode Island's affordability crisis, those who have 'non-primary residences valued over $1 million' will be taxed under the proposal. Overall, homeowners would face an annual surcharge of $2.50 per $500 of assessed value above the first $1 million — meaning a $3 million second home would see a $10,000 yearly fee. Swift and her beachfront estate neighbors would likely get taxed $100,000 and up based on the size of their mansions. The budget also proposes a 63 percent hike in the real estate conveyance tax, which sellers pay upon transferring property. The state says revenue from both tax hikes would go toward affordable housing projects, including the construction of low-income units and expansion of housing tax credits. Kerry Park, a senior vice president Rhode Island Association of Realtors, tells DailyMail that many people who have median priced second homes are going to get hit hard. 'We do have a lot of smaller homes that are near the ocean. Since the pandemic those little tiny places are a lot of money now and if they've been in the family for generations now they're going to have to come up with this annual tax which isn't easy for a lot of those people,' she said. Watch Hill realtor Larry Burns warns the economic backlash of the tax will be brutal. Burns specializes in coastal and luxury properties, and says the impact of the tax will trickle down to longtime residents who are not wealthy, and to local economies. 'Rhode Island economy for the most part is driven by tourism, especially in all in New England especially coastal state like Rhode Island,' he told the Daily Mail. The beaches in Watch Hill are popular among residents who summer in the town 'And it's really going to discourage people from buying second homes here because of the added expense.' He continued: 'There's people like Taylor Swift — people will look at her and think, 'Well, she has so much money she'll never even notice an increase like this.' 'But it's not like the residents here have inexhaustible resources. '$100,000 here might be college education for the year for a kid, or two kids.' Burns added the tax could force many to part with cherished family homes. 'There's a lot of older folks or multigenerational properties where the siblings have inherited the property, and if you keep adding expenses people end up selling because they can't keep up with the cost,' he said. Local business owner James Nicholas, who is the fourth generation of his family to run St. Clair Annex, an ice cream shop down the hill from Swift's estate (yes, she's been in the shop and is lovely), put it best. 'As one of the people who run small businesses that benefit from from summer residents, I'm thinking of others like landscapers, lumber yards, contractors, pool companies who are are relying on these summer visitors,' he said. 'It's not the golden bullet that the people think it is that we're just gonna text rich people and nothing's gonna happen. There's downstream consequences. 'There's a stratum of society that can absorb that cost, but regular people, maybe they don't put an addition on the house, don't you know go to the local restaurants or they don't shop at the local shops as much, taxing them is short sighted thinking.' Whether the tax becomes law down the line remains uncertain, but Burns, the local realtor, says it could go either way.

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