A woman from Canada pleaded guilty on Wednesday to mailing a threatening letter containing the poison ricin to then-President Donald Trump at the White House.

Canadian Woman Who Wrote To Trump “I Might Use My Gun” Pleads Guilty To Ricin Letter

A woman from Canada pleaded guilty on Wednesday to mailing a threatening letter containing the poison ricin to then-President Donald Trump at the White House.
Pascale Ferrier, 55

A woman from Canada pleaded guilty on Wednesday to mailing a threatening letter containing the poison ricin to then-President Donald Trump at the White House.

The letter from Pascale Ferrier, 55, directing Trump to “give up and remove your application for this election,” was intercepted at a mail sorting facility in September 2020 before it could reach the White House.

The Quebec woman also pleaded guilty to sending similar threatening letters to Texas law enforcement officials.

She is expected to be sentenced to 262 months in prison, just short of 22 years, under the terms of a plea deal with prosecutors.

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“There is no place for political violence in our country, and no excuse for threatening public officials or endangering our public servants,” the U.S. attorney in Washington, Matthew Graves, said in a statement.

Prosecutors said Ferrier made the ricin, a potentially deadly poison derived from processing castor beans, then mailed it to Trump with a letter that referred to him as “The Ugly Tyrant Clown” and read in part: “If it doesn’t work, I’ll find better recipe for another poison, or I might use my gun when I’ll be able to come. Enjoy! FREE REBEL SPIRIT.”

She was arrested trying to enter a border crossing in Buffalo, New York, carrying a gun, a knife, and hundreds of rounds of ammunition, authorities said.

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The investigation also turned up eight letters to Texas officials affiliated with facilities where Ferrier had been jailed in 2019. The notes created “fear and stress,” even though they didn’t succeed in poisoning their targets, said Alamdar Hamdani, the U.S. attorney for Southern Texas.

Ferrier pleaded guilty to violating biological weapons prohibitions in two separate criminal cases filed in Washington and Texas.

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