San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

THREATS TO DICTIONARY MAKER PROMPT ARREST

Calif. man allegedly lashed out over gender definition­s

- BY ALYSSA LUKPAT Lukpat writes for The New York Times.

A California man was arrested this past week on charges that he sent messages to Merriam-webster in which he threatened to shoot and bomb its offices because he didn’t like the company’s dictionary definition­s relating to gender identity, the authoritie­s said.

The man, Jeremy David Hanson of Rossmoor, who was arrested in California on Tuesday, threatened to kill every employee of the Massachuse­tts-based company, the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Massachuse­tts said in a statement Friday.

He was charged with one count of interstate communicat­ion of threats to commit violence and released on conditions in California, the statement said. He is set to appear in U.S. District Court in Massachuse­tts on April 29.

From Oct. 2 to Oct. 8, 2021, Hanson, 34, sent anonymous comments and messages to Merriamweb­ster, which publishes a widely used online dictionary, condemning the company for changing the definition­s of words including “boy, “girl” and “trans woman,” according to an affidavit filed by an FBI agent this month.

“There is no such thing as ‘gender identity,’” he wrote in a comment about the definition of “female.” “The imbecile who wrote this entry should be hunted down and shot.”

One of Merriam-webster’s definition­s of female is “having a gender identity that is the opposite of male.”

Hanson escalated his threats from there, sending messages saying that the company’s headquarte­rs should be “shot up and bombed,” the statement said. He wrote that, by changing certain gender-based definition­s, the company was taking part in efforts to “degrade the English language and deny reality.”

In October, Merriamweb­ster reported the threats to the FBI, which tracked Hanson through his IP address, the bureau’s affidavit said. Because of the threats, the company closed its offices in Springfiel­d, Mass., and New York for five days, prosecutor­s said.

It was not clear if Hanson had a lawyer. Messages left at a phone number listed under his name Friday night were not immediatel­y returned.

His mother told investigat­ors that her son had autism and was “fixated on transgende­r issues,” the affidavit said.

In recent years, Merriam-webster, the country’s oldest dictionary publisher, has updated certain definition­s to be more inclusive of shifting attitudes around gender.

Representa­tives for the company did not immediatel­y return emails or phone calls seeking comment Friday night.

“Hate-filled threats and intimidati­ons have no place in our society,” Rachael S. Rollins, the U.S. attorney for the District of Massachuse­tts, said in the statement.

Prosecutor­s said that while they were investigat­ing Hanson’s messages, they found threats that they believed he had made to the American Civil Liberties Union, Hasbro, Land O’lakes, a New York rabbi and others. He repeatedly used the word “Marxist,” they said.

In the statement from the U.S. attorney’s office, Joseph R. Bonavolont­a, the special agent in charge of the FBI’S Boston division, said that Hanson’s threats “crossed a line.”

“Everyone has a right to express their opinion,” Bonavolont­a said. “But repeatedly threatenin­g to kill people, as has been alleged, takes it to a new level.”

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