Pro-abortion group hints at targeting Supreme Court Justice Amy Coney Barrett's children, church, and home



Far-left activist group Ruth Sent Us implored its followers to unleash protests at the church and home of Supreme Court Justice Amy Coney Barrett. The pro-abortion activist group hinted at targeting Barrett's children.

Ruth Sent Us – the far-left activist group named after late liberal Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg — is targeting Justice Barrett over the possibility that she would vote to overturn Roe v. Wade.

Ruth Sent Us organized protests last month against Supreme Court justices – which the group described as "six extremist justices."

This week, Ruth Sent us called for more protests against Justice Barrett.

"If you’re in the DC metro area, join us," the group wrote on Tuesday. "Our protests at Barrett’s home moved the needle to this coverage."

The far-left group highlighted Barrett's daily schedule and the school where her children attend.

"Falls Church is a People of Praise stronghold," Ruth Sent Us stated. "She sends her seven kids to a People of Praise school that she sat on the Board of Directors for. She attends church DAILY."

The tweet included photos of Barrett with the name of the church she regularly attends, and advocated protesters to "voice your anger" by demonstrating at the place of worship.

\u201c@duty2warn If you\u2019re in the DC metro area, join us. Our protests at Barrett\u2019s home moved the needle to this coverage.\n\nFalls Church is a People of Praise stronghold. She sends her seven kids to a People of Praise school that she sat on the Board of Directors for. She attends church DAILY.\u201d
— Duty To Warn \ud83d\udd09 (@Duty To Warn \ud83d\udd09) 1654635550

Ruth Sent Us also sent a "special message" to Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh's wife and children at their school this week.

The pro-abortion group posted the addresses of conservative-leaning Supreme Court justices on the internet in May.

Federal prosecutors said Nicholas John Roske – the California man who allegedly wanted to assassinate Justice Kavanaugh – found the Supreme Court justice's address online.

"Roske stated he began thinking about how to give his life a purpose and decided that he would kill the Supreme Court Justice after finding the Justice's Montgomery County address on the Internet. Roske further indicated that he had purchased the Glock pistol and other items for the purpose of breaking into the Justice's residence and killing the Justice as well as himself," the arrest affidavit says.

Roske was arrested outside Kavanaugh's Maryland home and had a Glock 17 pistol, ammunition, pepper spray, zip ties, a hammer, a screwdriver, a crowbar, and duct tape.

There have been regular protests at the homes of Supreme Court justices ever since the draft court opinion that could overturn Roe v. Wade was leaked in May.

This week, the Department of Homeland Security warned that the leaked Supreme Court draft opinion challenging Roe v. Wade has ignited a wave of threats.

"Given a high-profile U.S. Supreme Court case about abortion rights, individuals who advocate both for and against abortion have, on public forums, encouraged violence, including against government, religious, and reproductive healthcare personnel and facilities, as well as those with opposing ideologies," the DHS report stated.

Abortion activists send 'special message' to Brett Kavanaugh's wife and children, post picture outside their school



Ruth Sent Us, the far-left group that publicized the addresses of conservative-leaning Supreme Court justices, sent the family of Justice Brett Kavanaugh a "special message" on Wednesday.

The message was delivered on the same day an armed man, Nicholas John Roske, was arrested near Kavanaugh's home. The man told authorities he wanted to kill Justice Kavanaugh.

What did Ruth Sent Us do?

After announcing more protests outside the homes of Chief Justice John Roberts and Justices Samuel Alito, Amy Coney Barrett, and Kavanaugh, Ruth Sent Us posted a picture of a billboard outside of the school where Kavanaugh's daughters attend.

"A special message for Ashley Kavanaugh and your daughters — this billboard was on your school grounds. We feel for you," the far-left org said.

The group added that Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell and Republican lawmakers "aren't worried for your safety."

The claim is patently false. In fact, the Senate unanimously passed a bipartisan bill that would extend police protection the immediate family members of Supreme Court justices.

A special message for Ashley Kavanaugh and your daughters — this billboard was on your school grounds. We feel for you.@LeaderMcConnell and the GOP aren’t worried for your safety. They worry only for the expensive Supreme Court they rigged, and their own power. #SCOTUS pic.twitter.com/g3n5fgjNZW
— Ruth Sent Us 🪧 (@RuthSentUs) June 8, 2022


The message and picture generated even more outrage against Ruth Sent Us. The group was accused of "targeting" Kavanaugh's family.

House Democrats are blocking the Senate bill passed last month that would extend security protection to Kavanaugh's immediate family. Their refusal to pass the bill takes on new significance if pro-abortion activists begin to direct their ire at families of Supreme Court justices.

Anything else?

In a separate tweet, Ruth Sent Us denied sending the armed man that police arrested.

"We offer our thoughts & prayers to Brett & Ashley Kavanaugh after a California man arrived by taxi near their home, armed with a gun & knife, then called the police on himself to confess his murderous rage against the abusive alcoholic 'Justice'. We didn’t send him," the group said.

However, Ruth Sent Us infamously posted the addresses of conservative-leaning justices on the internet after a leaked opinion draft indicated the Supreme Court had indicated to overturn abortion precedents.

And while it is not clear if Roske found Kavanaugh's address through Ruth Sent Us, Roske told investigators he did, in fact, find it online.

"Roske stated he began thinking about how to give his life a purpose and decided that he would kill the Supreme Court Justice after finding the Justice's Montgomery County address on the Internet. Roske further indicated that he had purchased the Glock pistol and other items for the purpose of breaking into the Justice's residence and killing the Justice as well as himself," the arrest affidavit says.

Leftist group that doxxed Kavanaugh plans another protest at his home after would-be assassin arrested there



Ruth Sent Us, the radical left-wing group that posted the home addresses of six Supreme Court justices online last month, is planning to stage a protest outside Justice Brett Kavanaugh's home Wednesday evening, hours after an armed man was arrested there for allegedly threatening to kill Kavanaugh.

Early Wednesday morning, police took an armed suspect into custody outside Kavanaugh's home in Montgomery County, Maryland. The suspect had allegedly called emergency dispatchers and said he intended to murder the justice and then kill himself.

FBI Special Agent Ian Montijo filed an affidavit in court that said the suspect, Nicholas John Roske of California, told police he was upset with the leaked draft Supreme Court opinion that indicated the court would overturn its abortion precedents and believed Kavanaugh would also vote to loosen gun control laws after the recent mass shooting in Uvalde, Texas. Roske allegedly found Kavanaugh's address online, bought a Glock pistol, and traveled to Maryland intending to kill him. He has been charged with attempted murder of a U.S. Supreme Court justice.

The private home addresses of six Supreme Court justices, including Kavanaugh's, were posted online by Ruth Sent Us in May after a draft majority opinion for Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization was leaked to Politico. The draft document, authored by Justice Samuel Alito, explained the court's reasoning for upholding Mississippi's 15-week abortion ban and overturning its precedent in Roe v. Wade.

Though there is not yet an official decision by the court, pro-abortion rights activists seethed and began possibly illegal demonstrations against the impending decision outside the private homes of the Republican-appointed justices.

When the Washington Post broke the news Wednesday that an armed suspect making threats against Kavanaugh's life was arrested outside his home, Ruth Sent Us downplayed the incident on Twitter and denied reports that the suspect was carrying a gun and a knife.

"We are committed to non-violence. Fundamentalists will talk non-stop about how our peaceful protests inspired this, rather than the daily mass-murders in America," the group tweeted. "Oh, what was this 'weapon' the 'California man' had? If it was a gun or even a knife, police would say so."

\u201cWe are committed to non-violence. \n\nFundamentalists will talk non-stop about how our peaceful protests inspired this, rather than the daily mass-murders in America. \ud83d\ude0f\n\nOh, what was this \u201cweapon\u201d the \u201cCalifornia man\u201d had? If it was a gun or even a knife, police would say so. \ud83d\ude0f\u201d
— Ruth Sent Us \ud83e\udea7 (@Ruth Sent Us \ud83e\udea7) 1654700210

The FBI affidavit confirmed that the suspect, Roske, had a tactical knife and a Glock 17 pistol with ammunition in his possession when he was taken into custody. He was also carrying pepper spray, zip ties, a hammer, screwdriver, nail punch, crow bar, pistol light, duct tape, hiking boots with padding on the outside of the soles, among other items, the FBI said.

When a Twitter user responded to Ruth Sent Us and said the group's tweet "will not age well," the left-wing activists asserted "Yes, it will," and said, "We're protesting peacefully at his home again tonight."

\u201c@mprussart Yes, it will. We\u2019re protesting peacefully at his home again tonight.\u201d
— Ruth Sent Us \ud83e\udea7 (@Ruth Sent Us \ud83e\udea7) 1654700210

Subsequent tweets by Ruth Sent Us announced that the group intends to participate in protests outside of Kavanaugh's and Chief Justice John Roberts' homes in Chevy Chase, Md. Wednesday night.

"We offer our thoughts & prayers to Brett & Ashley Kavanaugh after a California man arrived by taxi near their home, armed with a gun & knife, then called the police on himself to confess his murderous rage against the abusive alcoholic 'Justice'," the group mockingly tweeted. "We didn't send him."

\u201cWe offer our thoughts & prayers to Brett & Ashley Kavanaugh after a California man arrived by taxi near their home, armed with a gun & knife, then called the police on himself to confess his murderous rage against the abusive alcoholic \u201cJustice\u201d. \n\nWe didn\u2019t send him. #RuthSentUs\u201d
— Ruth Sent Us \ud83e\udea7 (@Ruth Sent Us \ud83e\udea7) 1654700210

According to another leftist activist group, Downright Impolite, the demonstrations will begin at 7 p.m. ET.

\u201cTonight we peacefully (different than quietly \ud83e\udd23) rise together to say, \u201cNot today, Fascists!\u201d You in?!\n\n@ShutDown_DC @OurRightsDC @RuthSentUs @riseup4abortion #SCOTUSisCompromised #pridemonth2022 #Protest #Women #LGBT #WearOrange\u201d
— Downright Impolite (@Downright Impolite) 1654703310

Republican lawmakers responded to the alleged threat against Kavanaugh by calling on the Democratic House majority to pass a bill providing additional security measures for Supreme Court justices.

Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) railed against House Democrats on the Senate floor Wednesday for blocking the bill — which passed unanimously in the Senate.

"House Democrats need to stop their multi-week blockade against the Supreme Court security bill and pass it before the sun sets today," he said.

The U.S. Department of Homeland Security warned in May that political violence directed at the court and its justices is "likely to persist and may increase leading up to and following the issuing of the Court's official ruling" on abortion.

Left-Wing Group That Doxxed SCOTUS Justices’ Home Addresses Downplays Death Threat Against Kavanaugh

The shady left-wing organization Ruth Sent Us, which published the addresses of Republican-nominated Supreme Court justices’ homes following a leak of the SCOTUS Dobbs v. Jackson draft opinion, is downplaying a threat against Justice Brett Kavanaugh and his family. The Washington Post reported on Wednesday morning that a California man “carrying at least one weapon” […]

'The time for civility is over': Angry pro-abortion activists stage protests outside homes of Supreme Court justices in 'vigil' for Roe v. Wade; more protests planned



Pro-abortion activists marched to the residences of Supreme Court Justices John Roberts and Brett Kavanaugh on Saturday night. The protests right outside of the homes of the Supreme Court justices were backlash to a leaked draft decision that indicates that the U.S. Supreme Court could potentially overturn the controversial Roe v. Wade decision.

Roughly 100 pro-abortion activists gathered outside the homes of the Supreme Court justices in Chevy Chase, Maryland. The flyer for the demonstration called for "reproductive freedom."

In videos posted to social media, protesters are heard chanting, "Keep abortion safe and legal," "You don't care if people die," "The whole world is watching," "We will not go back," and "My body, my choice."

The protesters drew hangers outside the homes of the Supreme Court justices. The pro-abortion activists held up signs that read, "F*** your God" and "Abortion is healthcare."

The scene in front of Chief Justice John Roberts\u2019 housepic.twitter.com/vJVxxFoMNO
— Douglas Blair (@Douglas Blair) 1651967668
We also stopped at Chief Justice Roberts\u2019 house. #BansOffOurBodiespic.twitter.com/waUxx82IFZ
— FederalFelonMouse (she/her) (@FederalFelonMouse (she/her)) 1651972649
Back at Kavanaugh\u2019s house. #BansOffOurBodiespic.twitter.com/jiaSg15Okc
— FederalFelonMouse (she/her) (@FederalFelonMouse (she/her)) 1651969253


Outside of Kavanaugh\u2019s house. #BansOffOurBodiespic.twitter.com/6vrmkgl6dr
— FederalFelonMouse (she/her) (@FederalFelonMouse (she/her)) 1651969198
Chalk outline of a coat hanger outside Chief Justice John Roberts\u2019 home.pic.twitter.com/2L0vK2he1y
— Douglas Blair (@Douglas Blair) 1651967677

Douglas Blair – a news producer at the Daily Signal who covered the protests – noted, "The energy is markedly more negative outside Kavanaugh’s house. The anger has become much more palpable than outside any other justices’ house."

The energy is markedly more negative outside Kavanaugh\u2019s house. The anger has become much more palpable than outside any other justices\u2019 house.pic.twitter.com/zY2OY34hcA
— Douglas Blair (@Douglas Blair) 1651969257

"The time for civility is over, man," a protester told Bloomberg. "Being polite doesn’t get you anywhere."

Another protester called the possible overturning of Roe V. Wade "bulls**t," and said, "You don't get to take away our bodily autonomy and enjoy your Saturday night at home – you get to do one or the other."

"This is personal, so we're going to take it to the personal space," the activist said. "They did this, not us."

The @DailySignal spoke with one of the protesters before the march to the justices\u2019 houses. Here\u2019s what she had to say.pic.twitter.com/9K9OJ274bk
— Douglas Blair (@Douglas Blair) 1651968175

Police showed up to disperse the protesters. One police officer appears to be informing the protesters that the demonstration is a violation of 18 U.S. Code § 1507 – Picketing or parading.

18 U.S.C. § 1507 states:

Whoever, with the intent of interfering with, obstructing, or impeding the administration of justice, or with the intent of influencing any judge, juror, witness, or court officer, in the discharge of his duty, pickets or parades in or near a building housing a court of the United States, or in or near a building or residence occupied or used by such judge, juror, witness, or court officer, or with such intent uses any sound-truck or similar device or resorts to any other demonstration in or near any such building or residence, shall be fined under this title or imprisoned not more than one year, or both.
Protestors arguing with cops. They say arrests might start happening soon.pic.twitter.com/lUPHUMwdZ7
— Douglas Blair (@Douglas Blair) 1651968777

It was not clear if either justice and their family were at the residences during the protests. Kavanaugh has two daughters – both of whom are minors. Roberts has two adopted children.

Last week, White House press secretary Jen Psaki was asked about the planned protests outside the homes of U.S. Supreme Court justices, and she said, "We certainly encourage people to keep it peaceful and not resort to any level of violence."

The far-left activist organization ShutDown DC has already planned a march at the home of Supreme Court Justice Samuel Alito.

The evening of Monday, May 9, we will hold a vigil for all these rights that Alito is threatening to take away. Because it’s been impossible to reach him at the Supreme Court (especially now with the enormous fences), we will do it at his home. At 7:30 pm we will gather at a nearby location and walk together to his house. At the foot of his driveway, on the public street, we will light candles and speakers will share their testimony. We will hold a moment of silence for the rights we know are ours, then walk back together to the meeting location.

Ruth Sent Us — another far-left activist group named after late liberal Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg — announced a "Walk-By Wednesday" protest on May 11 "at the homes of the six extremist justices, three in Virginia and three in Maryland."

Last week, Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) floated the idea that the leaked opinion was done so to "intimidate" the justices.

"The next time you hear the far left preaching about how they are fighting to preserve our Republic’s institutions & norms remember how they leaked a Supreme Court opinion in an attempt to intimidate the justices on abortion,” Rubio wrote on Twitter.

On Friday, CNN warned that the leak of the Supreme Court potentially overturning Roe v. Wade could cause ignite protests by the "far-right."

"CNN has learned that the U.S. Capitol police are bracing for large demonstrations that are being organized by far-right groups to protest abortion rights," said CNN guest host Alex Marquardt.

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