CAMDEN, N.J. – A New Jersey resident was sentenced yesterday
to 87 months in prison for threatening to murder former U.S. Rep. Frank
LoBiondo and members of the congressman’s staff, U.S. Attorney Craig Carpenito
announced.
Joseph Brodie, 40, of Millville, New Jersey, was previously
convicted in Camden federal court on two counts of making threats to officials,
officers and employees of the United States – specifically, for a telephone
threat to murder LoBiondo’s chief of staff and an email threat to murder
LoBiondo, his chief of staff, his veterans affairs liaison, and all of the
other staff of the Mays Landing office. During the sentencing hearing
yesterday, the Court determined that over the course of the prosecution, Brodie
had obstructed justice and that there also was evidence to show he had intended
to carry out his threats.
According to documents filed in this case and the evidence
presented at trial:
In the spring of 2017, Brodie reached out to LoBiondo
seeking assistance with the medical care and treatment that Brodie was
receiving from the Veterans Administration. Over the course of the next few
months, Brodie spoke and corresponded with the congressman’s Veterans Affairs
Liaison and a caseworker, both of whom assisted him with appointments and
meetings regarding his medical care. On Sept. 19, 2017, Brodie contacted the congressman’s
office and spoke to the chief of staff on the phone. Brodie wanted the chief of
staff to arrange a meeting with the congressman, but the chief of staff
refused. During this phone call, Brodie became angry and ultimately threatened
the life of the chief of staff – calling him “a dead man.”
Approximately an hour and a half later, Brodie sent an email
to the congressman’s veterans’ affairs liaison as well as the caseworker,
threatening their lives as well as the lives of the congressman and his staff
in the Mays Landing Office. In this email, Brodie stated that he wanted to meet
the congressman “face to face” and he pointed out “how easy” it was to find the
congressman’s Mays Landing Office. Brodie also attached a terrain map of the
area, with the area around the congressman’s office enlarged for detail and a
red pinpoint location marker on the office. Writing about the map, Brodie
stated, “[i]t even shows the environment and surrounding terrain, parking lots,
wooded areas, etc., (like the kind a highly trained Combat Infantryman would
use)…”
On the same day as the threats, Brodie sent text messages to
his fiancée stating: “I threaten the life of a Congressman’s Chief of Staff.
I’m pretty sure the Secret Service are going to investigate.” He also wrote
that he was “prepared” for any law enforcement officers who might respond to
his home. He wrote, “I’ll give them a chance to leave. If not, it’ll be First
Blood Part II Type Shit (if you never saw that Rambo movie).” Brodie also
wrote, “I won’t surrender. It’s not in me.” The same day, Brodie spoke to his
fiancée on the phone and told her that he was going to travel to an address in
New Jersey, that he had GPS coordinates in his car, that he was going to kill
LoBiondo’s chief of staff, and that there was going to be a “blood bath.”
One week later, in a statement recorded by the FBI, Brodie
confessed to having made the phone threat to the chief of staff on Sept. 19,
2017, and to having sent the email threat on Sept. 19, 2017.
The evidence showed that at the time Brodie made these
threats, Brodie owned several firearms and a large amount of ammunition at his
home.
U.S. Attorney Craig Carpenito credited special agents of the
FBI’s Atlantic City Resident Agency, under the direction of Special Agent in
Charge Gregory W. Ehrie in Newark; special agents of the U.S. Capitol Police,
under the direction of Chief Steven Sund; officers from the N.J. State Police,
under the direction of Col. Patrick J. Callahan; and the Cumberland County
Prosecutor’s Office, under the direction of Prosecutor Jennifer Webb-McRae,
with the investigation leading to yesterday’s sentencing.
The government is represented by Assistant U.S. Attorneys
Sara A. Aliabadi and Jason Richardson, of the Camden office.
Defense counsel: Gina Amoriello, Esquire, Westmont, NJ and
Philadelphia, PA
No comments:
Post a Comment