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DOJ charges white supremacist after threats to US lawmaker, Muslims and transgender people

By Thomson Reuters Jul 10, 2026 | 4:36 PM

By Kanishka Singh

WASHINGTON, July 10 (Reuters) – A self-identified white supremacist in Pennsylvania was indicted by a federal grand jury after he threatened violence against a member of ​Congress, Muslims, transgender people and Democrats, the Department of ‌Justice said on Friday.

Here are the details:

• The 12-count Indictment by a federal grand jury in Pittsburgh named Robert Hlovchiec, 32, as the sole defendant, the DOJ said in a statement, which did not identify the ‌member ​of Congress.

• Between February and March, Hlovchiec ⁠posted comments to YouTube ⁠videos where he threatened violence against the member of Congress, Democrats and liberals, transgender people, and various minority groups like Muslims, the DOJ said.

• “If i get the chance im going ​to do a mass shooting wherever (member of Congress) is standing. (Member of Congress) needs to die … America is not for sale. ⁠America is not a Muslim country,” ⁠he said in his threats, according to the ​DOJ.

• “If i get the chance I’ll shoot everyone in (member of Congress)’s ​family. America is a white Christian nation. We are ‌ready to kill and die before foreigner Muslims take over,” the DOJ quoted him as saying.

• The federal grand jury indicted Hlovchiec on “charges of interstate threats and influencing, impeding, or retaliating ⁠against a federal official by threat,” the DOJ said.

• Hlovchiec identified himself as a Nazi and a white supremacist and expressed desires to carry ⁠out mass shootings ‌and assassinations, it added.

• A representative for ⁠the defendant could not immediately be reached for ​comment.

• ‌U.S. rights advocates have noted rising Islamophobia over ​the last ⁠two-plus decades following the September 11, 2001 attacks, and more recently because of anti-immigration policies, white supremacy and the fallout of Israel’s war in Gaza.

• U.S. political experts have separately warned about political violence from rising polarization.

(Reporting by Kanishka Singh in Washington; editing ​by David Gaffen)