Orlando Sentinel

State Attorney Aramis Ayala reported to Orange deputies that she received a noose in the mail.

- By Christal Hayes Staff Writer

The Orange County Sheriff’s Office is investigat­ing after Orange-Osceola State Attorney Aramis Ayala was sent a noose in the mail. Ayala’s office reported the incident to the Sheriff’s Office after receiving two threatenin­g and racist letters in the mail, one of which included a noose, an incident report states.

The first letter was received March 20 after a clerk at the State Attorney’s Office picked up mail and saw a racist message on an envelope addressed to Ayala, an incident report states.

A week later, deputies say the clerk found a second threatenin­g piece of mail, which appeared to have come from the same person.

He opened the envelope and found a noose made out of green twine. It was taped to a post card, authoritie­s said.

The content of both letters was redacted by the Sheriff ’s Office.

Workers told Ayala, the state’s first African-American state attorney, about the threatenin­g pieces of mail.

She said she “believes the hangman’s noose was meant as a threat to her as a public official,” according to an incident report.

Ayala also said she thinks the incidents are a hate crime.

Deputies said they are investigat­ing and working with the U.S. Postal Service to try to figure out where the letters originated.

Ayala has become a controvers­ial figure after she announced last month she wouldn’t seek the death penalty against any defendant, including accused cop killer Markeith Loyd. After her announceme­nt, Gov. Rick Scott reassigned 23 of her capital cases to another prosecutor.

Ayala filed a lawsuit against Scott earlier this month, claiming the governor does not have authority to remove her from the cases. Many groups have continued to back her, including antideath penalty advocates and members of the Florida Legislativ­e Black Caucus.

Before she publicly disclosed her position on the death penalty, Ayala sought advice from groups that oppose capital punishment, emails show.

She also never disclosed her stance on capital punishment while campaignin­g against former State Attorney Jeff Ashton.

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