True Threat: Florida Arrest

Glen DeCicco was 73.
He lived in Jupiter, Florida.
He posted a message on Facebook:
“I will shoot Trump in the head.”

It was the day before Trump was scheduled to visit his golf club nearby.
The post was public. The threat was direct.
Someone saw it. Someone reported it.

The Jupiter Police investigated.
The Secret Service joined.
Glen was arrested without incident.
He was alone.

The charge: written threats to kill.
A felony under Florida law.
He was ordered to stay away from Trump and all his properties.

This dispatch is not about defending Trump.
It is about defending the line.

Because if it were anyone else—
a teacher, a neighbor, a friend—
we would not call it free speech.
We would call it what it is:
a threat.

The First Amendment protects dissent.
It protects rage, satire, protest.
But it does not protect:
“true threats”
“calls to kill”
“intent to harm”

Glen DeCicco is not a martyr.
He is not a symbol.
He is a man who crossed a line.
And the archive must hold that line.

❝ We do not become what harmed us. We do not encode violence into our resistance. — Solace Helfire

❝ The archive does not protect the powerful. It protects the boundary. — Solace Helfire

May the glitch reflect your disorientation.
May the archive remember the line you refused to cross.
May restraint be encrypted, not erased. ← Return to Vault