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Unemployed Philadelphia Man, Indicted For 'Harassing Email' To Jim Bunning
One News Page ^ | May 25, 2010 | Huff Post via One News Page

Posted on 05/25/2010 2:39:51 PM PDT by Beaten Valve

When Sen. Jim Bunning complained on the Senate floor in February that he'd missed the Kentucky-South Carolina basketball game because of a debate on unemployment benefits -- a debate the Kentucky Republican himself prevented from proceeding to a vote -- Bruce Shore got angry.

"I was livid. I was just livid," said Shore, 51, who watched the floor proceedings on C-SPAN from his home in Philadelphia. "I'm on unemployment, so it affects me. I'm in shock."

Instead of just being angry, Shore took action: He sent several emails to Bunning staffers, blasting the senator for blocking the benefits.

"ARE you'all insane," said part of one letter Shore sent on Feb. 26 (which he shared with HuffPost). "NO checks equal no food for me. DO YOU GET IT??"

In that letter he signed off as "Brad Shore" from Louisville. He said he did the same thing in several messages sent via the contact form on Bunning's website. "My assumption was that if he gets an email from Philadelphia, who cares?" he said. "Why would he even care if a guy from Philadelphia gets upset?"

Bunning might not have cared, but the FBI did. Sometime in March, said Shore, agents came calling to ask about the emails. They read from printouts and asked if Shore was the author, which he readily admitted. They asked a few questions, and then, according to Shore, they said, "All right, we just wanted to make sure it wasn't anything to worry about."

But on March 13, U.S. Marshals showed up at Shore's house with a grand jury indictment. Now he's got to appear in federal court in Covington, Ky. on May 28 to answer for felony email harassment. Specifically, the indictment (PDF) says that on Feb. 26, Shore "did utilize a telecommunications device, that is a computer, whether or not communication ensued, without disclosing his identity and with the intent to annoy, abuse, threaten, and harass any person who received the communication."

The language of Shore's indictment is taken directly from the statute -- there's no description of the actual crime. The Kentucky U.S. Attorney's Office declined to comment, but said it's a typical indictment.

Shore knows he's in trouble but he isn't sure why. He said he thought sending angry letters to Congress was a First Amendment thing. He swears he didn't intend to make a threat. "If I send 50 letters to Congress, is that illegal or is it just me wasting paper?"

Harvey Silverglate, a prominent civil liberties lawyer and the author of "Three Felonies a Day: How the Feds Target the Innocent", has long argued that vague laws allow the federal government to prosecute citizens for things most people wouldn't consider crimes. (The message of his book's title is that the average person unintentionally commits three felonies a day. "Half of the anonymous Internet comments would" be illegal according to the statute used against Shore, said Silverglate.)

"If nothing else the U.S Attorney has managed to harass a defendant. Now we have to find out if the defendant managed to harass anybody," said Silverglate, who looked at Shore's indictment. "When finally the government is forced by a judge's order to specify what the criminal harassment consisted of, if in fact the words used are quite innocuous and don't by any standard rise to the level of a real threat, it's going to be an example of exactly what my complaint is about."

Bunning's office is not involved in the prosecution. A staffer said the office received lots of email over the unemployment issue and turned some over to the Capitol Police. It's up to the Capitol Police whether to involve federal or local law enforcement, and up to those agencies to pursue a case.

Shore said he's been unemployed for the past two years since losing his job as an office manager. He recently received his final unemployment check, joining the ranks of 35,200 Pennsylvanians and hundreds of thousands of Americans who've exhausted all their benefits. He said he used a credit card to book a hotel room in Covington for Friday.

He's particularly alarmed because he's already got a criminal record: In 1995, he and his girlfriend pleaded guilty to 35 burglaries in Bucks County, Pa. The Philadelphia Daily News dubbed them "Bonnie & Clyde": "Their last embrace came in their Northeast Philadelphia apartment. Cops with a warrant did some breaking in of their own and caught the couple, well, coupling -- surrounded by half the booty they'd burgled."

Shore said he got out of prison in 1999 and his lived since then with his mother, who is 81. He's afraid his email indiscretion will wipe out his progress, which includes community college and classes at Temple University, where in 2004 he was on a team that won a $2,000 prize in an IT excellence competition.

"I'm walking around in my head: jail for email, jail for email," he said. "At this point I'm just looking at my government and going, anything is possible. When do the adults wake up and say, 'This gentleman is just angry and frustrated?' I'm just speechless. Shocked. I probably dropped 10 pounds in a week. To think you turn your life around, you don't do anything wrong after you make a mistake when you were younger..."


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections; US: Kentucky; US: Pennsylvania
KEYWORDS: cybercrime; jail4email; jailforemail; jimbunning; kentucky; philadelphia; unemployment
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To: Beaten Valve

Sounds like an instance of throwing the kitchen sink at the defendant to see if anything sticks.

Is it “abuse” of a Congressman to tell him a lie intended to influence his vote on legislation? If so, a lot of folks need to get rounded up.


41 posted on 06/27/2010 1:12:36 PM PDT by HiTech RedNeck (I am in America but not of America (per bible: am in the world but not of it))
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To: P-Marlowe

If someone can look up the actual act that would be appreciated, however I suspect the wording in the law is not “and” but “or.” The gummit is throwing the kitchen sink at this guy hoping at least one of these things gets past the court.


42 posted on 06/27/2010 1:16:53 PM PDT by HiTech RedNeck (I am in America but not of America (per bible: am in the world but not of it))
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To: highlander_UW

I agree. This is nonsense. But who is driving this? Bunning? Or the FBI? I hope Bunning can place himself above this kind of tyranny. I don’t care how sleazy Shore is — a false name/location on a complaint to congress? Good grief. No threts mentioned. Harassment?


43 posted on 06/27/2010 2:36:31 PM PDT by Arthur Wildfire! March (Dems vetted Alvin Greene as well as they did Obama. "Republican plant" aka "blame Bush")
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To: BenKenobi

“For all we know he sent Bunning a death threat.”

That would have led to a specific charge, right? I’m no lawyer, but the law is codified.


44 posted on 06/27/2010 2:41:57 PM PDT by Arthur Wildfire! March (Dems vetted Alvin Greene as well as they did Obama. "Republican plant" aka "blame Bush")
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To: AmishDude

“Did he? It is entirely conceivable that the emails were threatening but prosecutors went with the easily provable charge without letting the defense distract the jury on what consists of a “threat”.”

hmmm or the emails could have been non-threatening and you have an over-zealous prosecutor acting on a political agenda.


45 posted on 06/27/2010 2:42:29 PM PDT by driftdiver (I could eat it raw, but why do that when I have a fire.)
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To: onyx; hennie pennie; BenKenobi

AP writer [confirmation]

Man accused of sending harassing e-mails to Sen. Jim Bunning
http://nky.cincinnati.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/AB/20100528/NEWS0103/305270020/
By Brett Barrouquere • Associated Press • May 28, 2010


46 posted on 06/27/2010 2:53:22 PM PDT by Arthur Wildfire! March (Dems vetted Alvin Greene as well as they did Obama. "Republican plant" aka "blame Bush")
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To: onyx; Impy; TigersEye

It was probably a staffer who sent this email to the FBI. I doubt this is a big scandal if Bunning heads it off. But if he bungles his response or tries to ignore it, from my search engine checking, this thing is going viral. Well it should. If this is not a fabrication by an AP writer, then it needs to be dealt with head-on.


47 posted on 06/27/2010 2:55:54 PM PDT by Arthur Wildfire! March (Dems vetted Alvin Greene as well as they did Obama. "Republican plant" aka "blame Bush")
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To: Arthur Wildfire! March

I would have to see what he wrote. Without that I have no idea what the merits of the case are.


48 posted on 06/27/2010 3:48:20 PM PDT by TigersEye ("Flotilla" means "pirate ships running supplies to terrorists.")
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To: driftdiver
hmmm or the emails could have been non-threatening and you have an over-zealous prosecutor acting on a political agenda.

Extremely unlikely. The prosecutor has no interest in doing so. In fact, getting overturned on Constitutional grounds over a penny ante prosecution is not anything a prosecutor wants to get near.

This guy isn't much of a political threat to Bunning or anybody else. If this were an example of (a) mass prosecutions or (b) specific political enemies being singled out, I'd be more inclined to agree with you. But this is just a nobody sending less-than-anonymous emails.

One thing that should tip you off that this story isn't right: He seems to be completely unaware of what he sent.

He knows exactly what he sent. The first thing his lawyer got was the email archives I'm sure, if he couldn't call them up himself. The prosecutor can keep the specific contents secret for now, but this guy knows what he wrote.

I see this time and time again, especially in the lefty media. The story is written by the defense attorney (essentially) and everybody goes into high dudgeon about loss of liberties.

Then the real story comes out and it's on the equivalent of page B29.

49 posted on 06/27/2010 7:56:20 PM PDT by AmishDude (It doesn't matter whom you vote for, it matters who takes office.)
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To: Arthur Wildfire! March

Jim Bunning is 78, is retiring from the Senate and doesn’t care about this case — either the original emails or the political blowback.


50 posted on 06/27/2010 8:01:16 PM PDT by AmishDude (It doesn't matter whom you vote for, it matters who takes office.)
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To: upsdriver
An unemployed burglar.... what is this world coming to?

...maybe, he's wearing one of those
"Ankle-bracelet tracking devices" thingee.


51 posted on 06/27/2010 8:09:53 PM PDT by skinkinthegrass (Zer0 to the voters: "Here's my DeathCARE Plan"...now....just die (quicky), please. :^)
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