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Elonis, 28, of the 2000 block of Schwab Avenue in Lower Saucon Township, cried during his time on the witness stand, explaining that he never meant the terrible things he wrote about hurting his ...
These posts date to before federal authorities probed Anthony Elonis' Facebook account for threats relating to his ex-wife, Dorney Park and local schools.
"All I wanted," as Elonis would later write, "was a wife and family to call my own." The Facebook profile photo of Anthony Elonis.
Anthony Elonis, whose Facebook posts included rants about attacking Dorney Park, killing his wife, murdering an FBI agent and slaughtering a class of kindergartners, told a federal judge Wednesday … ...
Rap lyrics often contain violent imagery, but when Anthony Elonis posted some on Facebook describing wanting his wife’s “head on a stick,” “making a name for [himself]” by shooting up a kindergarten ...
The Anthony family marked a significant achievement this past weekend as their eldest child reached a pivotal educational milestone.
It bears noting that even if Elonis dodged a criminal threat conviction, his social media posts could still cost him his job, contribute to a restraining order, and alienate his family.
Pennsylvania man Anthony Elonis posted Facebook messages, written in the form of rap lyrics, that talked about killing his wife, knifing a female FBI agent and shooting schoolchildren in 2010.
When should threatening words be enough to land someone in jail? Is it only when the person genuinely intends to intimidate or harm someone else? That’s what Anthony Elonis wants the U.S ...
Elonis’ case – considered the US Supreme Court’s first dealings in true threats on social media – drew the support of the American Civil Liberties Union.
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