SPOKANE, Wash.– On January 14th, protests in Minnesota flared up when an ICE agent shot a man in the leg during what DHS called a targeted traffic stop.
They said protesters broke into two government vehicles at the scene, telling FBI equipment and documents.
Those documents listed phone numbers, emails and driver’s licenses of agents.
The lists were posted online and on social media.
According to federal court documents, around 10 to 15 FBI employees started receiving calls and emails shortly after.
One FBI agent received three separate voicemails from someone threatening to kill them and his wife and daughter.
Investigators reviewed phone records and found a phone number with a 509-area code that called the FBI agents phone at the same time the voicemails were left.
Using a law enforcement database, they alleged the phone number was registered to 18-year-old Brenna Marie Doyle in Spokane.
Investigators said they also verified her identity, by confirming that number was connected to Doyle’s social media and payment apps.
Doyle is under supervised release but is expected to go to federal court in Minnesota to potentially face a trial.
A judge ordered her to not use any social media in the meantime.
The judge at Wednesday’s hearing also noted Doyle was arrested in July for resisting arrest and obstructing a law enforcement officer in Spokane.
She was also convicted of attempting to elude a police vehicle in February of last year.
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