BREAKING: Trump Vindicated in Newly Released 'Epstein Files' Interview
There’s a Blue Collar Boom Happening in America
Abrego Garcia, 'Maryland Man,' MS-13 Member, and Alleged Human Trafficker, Has Been Sprung...
Antifa Tried to Incite Violence Between Black and Jewish Neighbors – Watch How...
Defiant DeSantis Hits Back Hard at Federal Judge Who Slapped Down 'Alligator Alcatraz'
The First Wave of Epstein Files Is on its Way to Congress –...
SAFE HAVEN IN OHIO
Pennsylvania Man Sentenced to 28 months for SNAP, Medical Fraud
Ghislaine Maxwell Transcript: 'There is no list'
Canada Drops Retaliatory Tariffs Against the US
Trump: Lisa Cook Must Resign or Be Fired Over Mortgage Fraud Allegations
Nevada Man Sentenced for Over $11M COVID-19 Relief Fraud and Money Laundering Scheme
Joni Ernst Takes a Chainsaw to Washington Waste — And Taxpayers Are Winning
Chip Roy Champions Texas’s Redistricting
Trump Brings Law and Order — And Dinner — to D.C.'s Front Lines
Tipsheet

Far-Left Outlet Celebrates Violent BLM Activists' Release From Prison

AP Photo/Noah Berger

Far-Left publication Unicorn Riot celebrated the release of a violent Black Lives Matter prison stint after spending nearly ten years in prison after pleading guilty to using explosive materials to commit arson in 2014.  

Advertisement

The outlet painted BLM activist Eric King as a “political prisoner” despite throwing two Molotov cocktails into Congressman Emanuel Cleaver's (D-MO) office in 2014 as part of the BLM "hands up, don't shoot" riots in Ferguson, Missouri. 

Unicorn Riot posted photos of King leaving prison with his wife and child, wearing a "protect trans kids" shirt with a knife in the center.

“I got to walk out of prison wearing clothes that represent who I am, and so that felt really great," King said. 

The outlet fawned over how King spent his nine-plus years in prison, saying he taught “yoga, practicing mindfulness, writing poems and letters, doing legal work for himself and others, going to the chapel, and taking classes.” 

The far-Left writers also claimed he was repeatedly attacked and threatened by “white supremacists” and correctional officers because of his outspoken antifascist and anarchist political beliefs.

Advertisement

His wife gave him a “Free Palestine” shirt printed in rainbow-colored font, a beaded bracelet resembling the Palestinian flag, and a baseball hat inscribed with “No War But Class War.”

King raised $21,000 through GoFundMe despite violating the company's terms of service, which states that campaigns are not allowed to raise money for violent criminals or suspects. 

Before his arrest, King posted several social media posts that called for violence against law enforcement. 

“These cops aren’t going to kill themselves, get to the streets." one post read, while another said: “I want to leave KC better than I found or an ashes.” 

In a press statement from the United States Attorney's Office Western District of Missouri,  King threw a hammer through a window of the building where Cleaver’s office was. He then lit the Molotov cocktails and threw them at the building. The first bounced off the wall, while the second went through the window.


Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos