Summary

An anti-Trump conservative summit in Washington, DC, was evacuated Sunday due to a “credible bomb threat” allegedly sent by an account claiming to represent Enrique Tarrio, former Proud Boys leader.

The threat, which named several high-profile attendees, remains unverified by police. Tarrio, who was arrested over the weekend, denied involvement and threatened legal action.

The event, an alternative to CPAC, featured prominent anti-Trump conservatives and ex-law enforcement officers who had clashed with Tarrio earlier.

DC tensions were heightened amid the CPAC gathering and related protests.

    • @just_another_person
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      6615 hours ago

      Kind of understandable comment, but in the most dick way possible. They do this all the time, and now there’s nobody to investigate and arrest them.

      • @[email protected]
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        -3514 hours ago

        Pretty sick of people bowing to bullshit right wing threats. Those pussy ass bitches don’t have bombs.

        • NoneOfUrBusiness
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          108 hours ago

          Read the article again; it says “an account claiming to represent Enrique Tarrio, former Proud Boys leader”. This isn’t just right wing; this guy is a straight up far right fascist and could credibly toss a bomb at the summit.

        • @[email protected]
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          6314 hours ago

          That’s a dumb statement. Everyone in America has bombs with a quick trip to the hardware store and a few hours work. Bombs are not hard to make.

          • @[email protected]
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            -2313 hours ago

            All they have are empty threats… and since no bombs are going off, that’s pretty good evidence they don’t have anything.

            • Bob Robertson IX
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              3 hours ago

              Creating a bomb leaves a trail and the FBI has a pretty good record domestically of finding where they’ve come from. Couple that with the fact that any time there’s a threat detected then will places evacuate. Anyone who would actually call in a threat, after placing bombs would only result in becoming hunted by the FBI, so on that point you’re right: these threats are always hollow. At least until people stop evacuating after receiving a threat. Once that happens it will increase the likelihood that real bombs will start being placed.

              But to be clear, a lot of places do get bombed. In 2023 there were 320 bombings in the US. During the same year there were 3,203 threats. So, we’re looking at 0.1% … That would likely go up if people stopped taking the threats seriously.

              EDIT: I’m not sure anyone noticed, but my math was off by a factor of 10, er 100. Sorry about that!

              • @[email protected]
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                913 hours ago

                That math says 10%. But regardless, I think the core of the argument really is that those who actually intend to plant bombs don’t make bomb threats. By the time you escalate to the level where you’re convinced blowing people to pieces is actually a reasonable course of action, you’re not likely to be giving warnings. You either want people dead, or you don’t.

                • @[email protected]
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                  11 hour ago

                  Simply not true. Many organizations gave warning before bombing.

                  The Israeli military does that now, for example.

                  Looking to history, the IRA usually gave warning when they planted a bomb.

                • Bob Robertson IX
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                  12 hours ago

                  I agree, and I think a bomb ‘threat’ is actually just a way to disrupt things. I do think that if we started ignoring threats though, it would lead to an increase in actual bombings.

                  • @[email protected]
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                    2 hours ago

                    The relevant question should be “what portion of bombers previously issued bomb threats prior to escalating to actual bombings?” That is the question to ask.

              • @grue
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                613 hours ago

                In 2023 there were 320 bombings in the US. During the same year there were 3,203 threats. So, we’re looking at 0.1%

                Um… that’s 10%, not 0.1%.

                • @[email protected]
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                  111 minutes ago

                  There were less than 20 real bombing. There were over 320 bomb threats. I’d like to see where you got these numbers. They are off.