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President Donald Trump attends the 157th National Memorial Day Observance at Arlington National Cemetery, Monday, May 26, 2025, in Arlington, Virginia (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin).
In Ohio, a 47-year-old man stands accused of using social media to incite acts of violence against President Donald Trump, his supporters, and federal agents involved in immigration enforcement operations. The man allegedly called for these extreme actions through online platforms.
Charles Bronson Ingram was arrested on Wednesday, facing a charge of threatening interstate communications, as noted in court documents.
A criminal complaint filed in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Ohio reveals that the FBI received a report on January 29. This report highlighted alarming threats shared on YouTube between January 14 and January 28 by a user operating under the name “@dessertbooger9397.”
On the afternoon of January 14, the user posted inflammatory messages.
Just two hours later, this individual continued to publish more threatening content.
The following day on January 15, the user escalated the rhetoric, urging violence against federal agents and Trump supporters with statements like “Kill an agent and flee” and “We need to kill the far-right once and for all.”
Take the opportunity and kill ICE, CBE, etc. Randomly kill them from rooftops in highly populated areas, making escape easier. Strike them down and move, a few dozen dead agents and billionaires and they’ll hide so we can kill them one by one 70 million times (Crying with Laughter emoji).
The user continued to encourage violence against federal agents and Trump supporters in a series of posts on Jan. 15, writing things like, “Kill an agent and flee” and “We need to kill the far-right once and for all.”
On Jan. 19, he wrote, “I’m actually looking forward to killing these mother f—ers in the streets.”
Later that month, the user posted the following:
I’m personally preparing to hunt and kill ICE agents and I’m not even close to the only one. We the people will be killing some people that need to die. Run rabbit, run cause your days are done.”
Investigators traced the posts back to Ingram’s home and conducted “drive by surveillance,” where they observed an upside-down American flag that had the phrase “Kill Them All” spray painted across it as well as a sign that said “F— Trump.” Using cellphone data, federal agents were able to identify Ingram as the person behind the @dessertbooger9397 username.
After a post in late December in which Ingram allegedly wrote that he wanted to “see MAGA die, literally,” his alleged calls for violence continued to escalate. On Jan. 13, federal agents said he wrote the following:
I’m fully willing to kill ICE. If the hackers and such can dox these guys from ICE there’s people like me who can’t be bought, reasoned with or swayed by fear. The nobodies will capture, torture and murder these people. We start streaming videos of ICE agents getting skinned alive and tortured they’ll stop. The 1% need to fear a horrible death for them to get scared of the people!
According to the complaint, Ingram on Jan. 13 specifically called for the president’s death, writing, “Hang Trump on the Capital [sic] staircase like the traitorous pedo deserves.”
Federal agents on the morning of Feb. 4 executed a search warrant at Ingram’s home, where they recovered multiple firearms and ammunition, the complaint states. In a post-Miranda interview, Ingram confirmed that @dessertbooger9397 was his YouTube username and that he authored the aforementioned posts.
U.S. Magistrate Judge Carmen E. Henderson on Wednesday ordered Ingram to remain incarcerated until his preliminary detention hearing on Monday, Feb. 9, records show.