'We will shoot up your Newman Center with our new AR-14 rifles': Jane's Revenge allegedly threatens to kill pro-lifers at Omaha churches



Threatening letters allegedly written by members of the radical pro-abortion group Jane's Revenge were sent to two churches in Omaha, Nebraska, on Saturday, Fox News Digital reported.

On Saturday afternoon, the first note was discovered taped to the St. John Paul II Newman Center near the University of Nebraska-Omaha's Scott Campus. The Catholic-affiliated center serves as a housing facility and community space for UNO students.

"If our right to abortion in Bellevue is taken away due to the attempt to pass an abortion ban and it gets passed we will shoot up your Newman Center with our new AR-14 rifles. Sincerely, Jane's Revenge," the note to the Catholic center allegedly read.

The letter, which was addressed to the Newman Center director, Rev. Dan Andrews, was discovered by Students for Life members. The group's president, Kristan Hawkins, posted a photograph of the threatening note on social media.

Hawkins wrote that the group of pro-life activists was meeting at the center over the weekend to "strategize about how to use @studentsforlife's Campaign for Abortion Free Cities to shut down the late-term abortion facility in the state."

"When we arrived, a death threat via guns from Jane's Revenge was posted on the door," Hawkins explained.

\u201cBREAKING: Jane\u2019s Revenge threatens to shoot pro-lifers. \n\nThis morning in Nebraska, our team arrived for our @SFLAction Poltical Leadership Workshop where we are gathering activists from across the state to strategize about how to use @studentsforlife\u2019s Campaign for \u2026\u201d
— Kristan Hawkins (@Kristan Hawkins) 1670081498

The university posted an alert to students noting that UNO Public Safety, the Omaha Police Department, and the Douglas County sheriff's office are working together to investigate the incident and determine the credibility of the threats.

"This obviously causes us great concern," Rev. Dan Andrews told KETV. "Our number-one priority is the safety of our students ... we are thankful for UNO Police's prompt response and attention to this threat."

Lt. Neal Bonacci reported that around 5:15 p.m. on Saturday, another similar letter was sent to the Christ Community Church in Omaha, according to the Star Harald. The note also claimed to be written by Jane's Revenge and threatened violence against the Christian church.

In a message to church members, Christ Community Church stated, "Friends, earlier today, CCC staff found a threatening note taped to an outside door at CCC. The note claims to be from the abortion rights extremist group, Jane's Revenge, and makes threats against our Lead Minister and the church relating to an abortion policy discussion taking place in the City of Bellevue."

According to the Crime Prevention Research Center, between May 3 and September 24, there were 135 attacks on pro-life centers and activists.

In a June letter from Jane's Revenge, the group vowed to go after pro-life organizations following the Supreme Court's decision to overturn Roe v. Wade.

"From here forward, any anti-choice group who closes their doors, and stops operating will no longer be a target," Jane's Revenge wrote. "But until you do, it's open season, and we know where your operations are."

Pro-life activist punched in face by leftist woman in front of Supreme Court building after Amy Coney Barrett nomination



A female pro-life activist was punched in the face by a pro-choice woman in front of the Supreme Court building in Washington, D.C., on Sunday following President Donald Trump's nomination of Judge Amy Coney Barrett to the high court, Students for Life reported.

Image source: Facebook video screenshot via Breitbart

What happened?

Autumn Schimmer, 23 — communications and market manager of Students for Life Action and a member of the organization's "SCOTUS SQUAD" — was holding a sign on a sidewalk directly in front of the Supreme Court building while pro-life and pro-choice groups demonstrated.

"I was approached by a pro-choice woman who wanted to have a conversation about what feminism means to me," Schimmer noted to Students for Life. "I told her that women are not empowered when they kill their own children, and we need to do better. After that she was getting more aggressive. I took a step back to return to my group. She approached me and punched me in the face and ripped off my face mask."

Image source: Facebook video screenshot via Breitbart

Schimmer said on video afterward that her attacker "ran away into the crowd to hide like a coward" and that those on the left are "all cowards."

Image source: Twitter video screenshot via @StudentsforLife

SFL said police were called and an arrest was made.

The organization added that Schimmer told officers that other threatening behavior took place — and that the crowd consisted of about 5% pro-life advocates and 95% abortion supporters

Before the attack, Schimmer was holding a sign that read, "I can't believe these 'feminists' are protesting a woman" — presumably a reference to Judge Barrett's nomination.

Following the attack and arrest, Schimmer remarked to SFL that the incident was "very upsetting. Being attacked by a pro-choicer just shows that the violence of abortion breeds a culture of violence and normalizes it."

Here's the clip from Breitbart. Although it doesn't capture the moment of the punch — the camera was pointing away from the attacker and victim — the clip does show the immediate aftermath as well as Schimmer's in-the-moment reaction to the assault. The relevant portion begins after the 1:02:30 mark:

Here's a roundup of the weekend from Students for Life:

This weekend, we were met with hate and violence by pro-choice extremists at the Supreme Court. A team member of… https://t.co/p9XOTSWwhH
— studentsforlife (@studentsforlife)1601325776.0

Anything else?

Barrett, 48, was nominated Saturday — just 38 days before Election Day. Her confirmation appears certain since there are enough Republican votes waiting for her in the U.S. Senate.

The Senate will reportedly begin the confirmation process Oct. 12, and it will reportedly last just four days.

Once confirmed, Barrett would take the SCOTUS seat that had been occupied by the late far-left Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg for nearly three decades. Ginsburg died Sept. 18 at the age of 87. Barrett — a conservative judge who's been on the 7th Circuit Court of Appeals since 2017 — would give the high court a clear conservative majority.

Barrett is a devout Catholic and mother of seven children, including two adopted children and another with Down syndrome.

Leftists have been attacking Barrett's faith and family. A staff member on Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden's campaign suggested that those with strong faiths perhaps shouldn't be permitted to serve on the Supreme Court. And progressives attacked Barrett for signing a letter in 2006 that endorsed Catholic doctrine on the sanctity of life and called for an end to Roe v. Wade.

(H/T: The Christian Post)

Pro-life activists converge on Baltimore Planned Parenthood, paint 'Black Preborn Lives Matter' on street outside



Pro-life activists painted "Black Preborn Lives Matter" outside of a Baltimore, Maryland, Planned Parenthood on Saturday.

Activists arrived to begin the day's work around 5 a.m. local time.

What are the details?

As reported by The Washington Times, multiple groups of pro-life activists — Students for Life of America, the Frederick Douglass Foundation, and the Human Coalition — banded together to paint the message on the street outside of the facility on Howard Street in Baltimore.

Following the job, the demonstrators held up a sign reading, "President Trump, Help Us Save Lives. Defund Planned Parenthood."

In a statement, the Students for Life of America said "About 13% of American women are black, but they submit to over 38% of all abortions. This is exactly why we say #BlackPrebornLivesMatter. Black women and their preborn children MUST be protected from the atrocity of abortion."

In August, the groups informed Democratic Baltimore Mayor Bernard Young in a letter of their intention to paint the phrase on the street, citing previous instances of activists painting streets with phrases such as "Black Lives Matter" and "Defund the Police."

The groups reasoned that Young should permit such a move in light of previous demonstrations.

“Your original decision to paint 'Black Lives Matter' on the street may very well be government speech," a portion of the letter read according to the outlet. “However, your decision to allow private citizens to paint additional messages such as 'Defund the Police' and 'Black Trans Lives Matter' and to intervene on behalf of a public display of another's speech indicates that public areas are now an open forum for free speech."

In August, Washington, D.C., authorities prevented the groups from painting the message in front of the city's Planned Parenthood facility on 4th Street NE. Authorities also arrested two members of the group who wrote the message in chalk on the sidewalk instead.

“Fortunately, the event was far more in line with the constitution than our attempt to paint the street with the same message in Washington, D.C.," Students for Life said of the Baltimore demonstration. “There, two of our students were arrested not for painting, but for sidewalk chalking. Six cop cars were there to meet us in our nation's capital, doing the bidding of pro-abortion Mayor Muriel Bowser."

Students for Life shared an aerial shot of the artistry, writing, "Student [sic] for Life and Frederick Douglass Foundation joined with local Baltimore pro-life activists outside the Planned Parenthood to paint on the street early this morning! #BlackPrebornLivesMatter[.]"

Student for Life and Frederick Douglass Foundation joined with local Baltimore pro-life activists outside the Plann… https://t.co/OJaukJ8ZZe
— studentsforlife (@studentsforlife)1599307183.0