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D.C. Grand Jury Declines to Indict Woman Accused of Threatening Trump, Marking Latest Rebuff of Surge Cases

Prosecutors have not disclosed their next step.

Overview

  • Federal public defenders revealed the no-bill for Nathalie Rose Jones in a court filing and asked to shift her court-ordered home detention to release on personal recognizance.
  • Chief Judge James E. Boasberg previously overruled a magistrate and placed Jones on home detention with GPS monitoring and psychiatric care after her Aug. 16 arrest in Washington.
  • U.S. Attorney Jeanine Pirro condemned the decision as a politicized outcome, while her office weighs options that could include seeking a new indictment, filing misdemeanors, or dropping the case.
  • The refusal follows a string of recent D.C. grand-jury no-bills tied to the federal law-enforcement surge, including cases against Sean C. Dunn (the sandwich-throwing incident), Sidney Lori Reid, and Alvin Summers.
  • Prosecutors also disclosed a separate no-bill for Edward Alexander Dana in an unrelated alleged threat case, underscoring how unusually often Washington panels have rejected charges in recent weeks.