President Donald Trump vowed extreme penalties in late March for anybody who dared mess along with his pal Elon Musk’s Tesla dealerships. Now, his loyal enforcer—Lawyer Common Pam Bondi—is making good on that menace, saying that she’s pushing for a staggering 20-year jail sentence for a person accused of firebombing a Tesla dealership.
Bondi mentioned on Monday that the Justice Division had unsealed federal prices in opposition to Cooper Jo Frederick, 24, who allegedly attacked a Tesla dealership in Loveland, Colorado, on March 7.
A burned Tesla Cybertruck is parked at a Tesla lot in Seattle on March 10, 2025.
“I’ve made it clear: If you take part in the wave of domestic terrorism against Tesla properties, we will find you, arrest you, and put you behind bars,” Bondi mentioned in a video assertion, including, “All of these cases are a serious threat to public safety. Therefore, there will be no negotiating. We are seeking 20 years in prison.”
Frederick was initially charged underneath state legislation for possession of an incendiary machine, arson, and legal mischief earlier than the FBI later arrested him in Plano, Texas, following an FBI investigation, Bondi mentioned. She didn’t specify what federal prices Frederick faces.
Trump’s allies initially tried to color even peaceable critics of Tesla as home terrorists, although they shortly realized legislation enforcement wouldn’t slap that label on petty vandalism. (Musk, nonetheless, nonetheless insists the assaults on his dealerships quantity to “terrorism.”)
As a substitute, Bondi appears to be leaning on a federal statute, which reads:
Whoever maliciously damages or destroys, or makes an attempt to wreck or destroy, by the use of hearth or an explosive, any constructing, car, or different actual or private property utilized in interstate or overseas commerce or in any exercise affecting interstate or overseas commerce shall be imprisoned for not lower than 5 years and less than 20 years.
Frederick isn’t the one one within the crosshairs over the Loveland dealership assault. Lucy Grace Nelson, 40, was individually arrested in February with “criminal intent to commit a felony, criminal mischief, and using explosives or incendiary devices during a felony at the dealership,” in line with Enterprise Insider, which cited Colorado police data.
Notably, the Loveland, Colorado, dealership Frederick allegedly focused had been the location of 5 different crimes lately, legislation enforcement officers informed a neighborhood Fox affiliate. And it’s not simply U.S.-based Tesla dealerships going through assaults: Greater than a dozen Teslas went up in flames at a dealership in Rome, in what authorities suspect was arson.
What Musk’s pals in Trump’s Cupboard—and Musk himself—conveniently ignore is why individuals are concentrating on Tesla. It’s not simply random vandalism; it’s a backlash. Musk has been needlessly slashing federal jobs and federal funding, and he’s meddling within the bigger political panorama. It’s no surprise his automotive firm is feeling the warmth—not simply from activists however from the inventory market too.
Bondi’s aggressive sentencing request sends a transparent message: Beneath Trump’s watch, assaults on Musk’s empire can be met with the state’s brutal drive. In the meantime, critics can’t assist however notice the hypocrisy, given how selectively this administration chooses to throw the guide at criminals.
In fact, the identical administration that desires to lock this man up for twenty years has been remarkably silent on political violence when it fits their pursuits. When Trump supporters stormed the Capitol? When his allies harassed election employees? Not precisely the identical degree of urgency.
However relating to defending Musk—one among Trump’s favourite billionaires—instantly, the administration is all about legislation and order.
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