
Texas man convicted of threatening to lynch Nashville DA
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) — A Texas man associated with a neo-Nazi group was convicted on Wednesday of posting threats to lynch and kill Nashville District Attorney General Glenn Funk after another group member was charged with attacking a downtown bar worker.
David Aaron Bloyed, 60, of Frost, Texas, was found guilty by a federal jury in Nashville of one count of communicating a threat in interstate commerce, according to a news release from the U.S. Department of Justice. He faces up to five years in prison at sentencing.
Bloyed was found to have posted a photograph of Funk with the caption, 'Getting the rope,' and an emoji finger pointed towards Funk's image. A second post included a drawing of a person hanging by the neck from a gallows, with the phrase, 'The 'Rope List' grew by a few more Nashville jews today.' Both included swastika symbols.
Funk was targeted after a group of white supremacist, antisemitic and neo-Nazi provocateurs
came to Nashville last summer
and began livestreaming antics for shock value — waving swastika flags through crowded streets, singing hate songs on the downtown courthouse steps, and even briefly disrupting a Metro Council meeting.
At one point, a fight broke out between a bar worker and a member of the group, who used metal flagpole with a swastika affixed to the top to hit the employee. The group member was charged with aggravated assault. The bar worker was also charged in the tussle.
'Antisemitic hate has no place in Nashville or anywhere, and this verdict shows these hateful threats for what they are: a crime,' Acting U.S. Attorney Robert E. McGuire for the Middle District of Tennessee, said in a news release.

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