Florida woman gets time served for threatening to shoot Trump

Miranda Perez, a Florida woman, pleaded guilty to making threats against President Donald Trump and was sentenced to 246 days of time served plus two years of probation. The threat was posted on Facebook in July 2025, referencing Trump's golf course. She faces restrictions including no social media and a mental health evaluation.

Miranda Perez pleaded guilty on Tuesday to making written or electronic threats to kill or do bodily injury, according to court records. She received 246 days of time served and two years of probation. The court ordered her to stay away from Trump, his family, and properties, and prohibited social media use during probation. She is also barred from possessing firearms, ammunition, or weapons, and must undergo a mental health evaluation and follow recommended treatment. On July 14, 2025, the 34-year-old Perez posted on Facebook: 'Hey Trump I'ma go to your Gulf course an be the next shooter lol I'm bored,' with emojis of laughter and raised hands, ending with 'be there soon' and a smiling face emoji. Authorities linked the profile to Perez through photos matching her state ID and a prior booking photo. This follows a 2019 incident where Perez threatened to shoot up Barton Elementary School in Palm Beach County after learning her children would transfer there. She admitted to the messages but said she would not act on them. Found seriously mentally ill, she surrendered firearms, was deemed incompetent to stand trial, and the case was dismissed in 2021. The recent case proceeded after she was found competent, changing her plea from not guilty. President Trump survived assassination attempts in 2024: a sniper at a July rally in Butler, Pennsylvania, and Ryan Routh at Trump International Golf Club in West Palm Beach, Florida, in September, who was sentenced to life in prison.

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Realistic courtroom illustration depicting the conviction of a defendant in a Florida child sex-abuse trial.
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Pardoned Jan. 6 defendant convicted in Florida of child sex-abuse offenses, prosecutors say

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Andrew Paul Johnson, a Florida man who participated in the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol and was later pardoned by President Donald Trump, has been convicted by a Hernando County jury of multiple child sex-abuse-related offenses, including lewd and lascivious exhibition and molestation charges involving a child who was 11 at the time, according to NPR and Florida prosecutors. He is scheduled to be sentenced in March and could face a life sentence.

A 46-year-old Florida man faces federal charges for allegedly sending emails vowing to murder President Donald Trump. Markus Edward Hamlett, a former U.S. Marine Corps and Air Force member, sent the threats in May 2025 and made similar statements during a mental health hold. Authorities also linked him to prior incidents in California and an email to the CIA.

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A 41-year-old Virginia man has been sentenced to over two years in federal prison for making violent threats against President Donald Trump and his family on social media. Valeriy Kouznetsov pleaded guilty to transmitting interstate threats, following a series of posts referencing a prior assassination attempt. The sentencing comes after Kouznetsov's history of similar threats, including a 2020 incident at a Trump hotel.

A Wisconsin man has been sentenced to more than 16 years in prison for impersonating an immigrant to frame him with fake death threats against President Donald Trump. Demetric Scott targeted Ramon Morales Reyes to avoid testifying in a robbery case. The scheme led to Morales Reyes's mistaken arrest by federal authorities.

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A 44-year-old Arizona man has been sentenced to 27 months in federal prison for posting violent threats against President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris on social media. Michael David Hanson pleaded guilty to making threats against the president and his successors. The case highlights the legal consequences of online threats against U.S. leaders.

Jacob Hudson, a 38-year-old U.S. Air Force veteran from Muskogee, Oklahoma, has pleaded guilty to two counts of interstate threats targeting FBI Director Kash Patel and his wife Alexis Wilkins. The plea deal drops another charge and stems from social media posts in late 2025 referencing the Jeffrey Epstein case. Hudson faces up to five years in federal prison.

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Andrew Paul Johnson, the 45-year-old Jan. 6, 2021, U.S. Capitol riot participant previously covered in this series for his February conviction on child sex offenses, was sentenced Thursday to life in prison in Florida's Fifth Judicial Circuit. The crimes followed his 2025 pardon by President Donald Trump, after which he boasted online about his release.

 

 

 

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