Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Man pleads guilty to threatenin­g Kenosha officials in 2020 unrest

He admitted sending the threats ‘to scare them’

- Bruce Vielmetti

A 27-year-old Georgia man has pleaded guilty to emailing death threats to Kenosha officials during the violent unrest there in 2020, and leaving one a threatenin­g voice mail.

According to federal court records, Minjie Cao sent an email on Aug. 27, 2020 to an unidentified “government official” that read, “I will put 7 bullets in your head! This Sunday morning 9AM. Write a will now before you die!”

Two days later, Cao used his cellphone to make five calls to two more officials’ office phones, and another email to one of them.

It read, “If you don’t fire (Individual #21), I will put 7 bullets in your head in front of your family. Deadline: August 31, 12PM EST If not, you will not see the sunlight in September.”

The FBI traced the email address and phone numbers to Cao and went to his residence in Duluth, Georgia on Sept. 10. He acknowledg­ed the address and number were his, but denied sending threats and claimed his accounts must have been hacked.

After confronted a second time, with more informatio­n, Cao admitted sending the threats “to scare them and cause them substantia­l emotional distress,” according to his plea agreement. He said he acted because he was angry about the shooting of a Black man by Kenosha police and the unrest that followed.

Cao was indicted in September on three counts of using interstate communicat­ions systems to make threats of injury. He pleaded guilty this month to a single count of stalking as part of a plea agreement.

Cao faces up to five years in prison and a fine of up to $250,000 at his sentencing in Milwaukee federal court in October.The agreement says the government and defense attorney will recommend a three-year term of probation, with a total of 120 days in jail during the first year.

According to online profession­al sites and his Facebook page, Cao is a graduate of Emory University’s law school, near Atlanta.

The violence in Kenosha that month began after Kenosha police Officer Rusten Sheskey shot Jacob Blake in the back when he refused officers’ orders during a response to a domestic dispute.

Bystander video of the incident quickly went viral, leading to protests and demonstrat­ions that turned violent with major arsons downtown.

Two nights later, Kyle Rittenhous­e, then 17, fatally shot two demonstrat­ors and wounded a third. A jury acquitted Rittenhous­e, who testified he acted in self-defense, of all charges in November.

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