Honolulu man charged in threats against Michigan governor

Summary

A Honolulu man was charged after authorities said he threatened to kill Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer and attack the state Capitol.

Why this matters

The case highlights how federal authorities handle interstate threats against public officials and government buildings. It also shows the legal consequences repeat offenders can face in threat cases.

A 48-year-old Honolulu man who previously served prison time for threatening a U.S. president and a federal judge was arrested on suspicion of threatening to kill Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer.

Ronald William Saville was charged by criminal complaint Monday with sending interstate communications containing threats. He was arrested in Abilene, Texas, made an initial court appearance, was ordered detained, and will be transported to Hawaii for trial.

According to federal court records, Saville emailed Michigan State Police on May 9, identified himself, referenced the state Capitol in Lansing, and said he was “going to walk in with a gun — an AR-15 — and open fire and kill as many people as possible. I mean what I say. I’m not a joke.”

Later that day, he also allegedly emailed Whitmer, writing, “just to let you know on Tuesday second, Lancy, Michigan is never gonna be the same again going to walk into the state capital shoot it up and kill as many people as possible than that I’m coming for you(.)”

The complaint said Saville called the Federal Bureau of Investigation on May 12 and told an agent he wanted to kill Whitmer because of her political affiliation, had been researching a trip to Michigan, and still intended to carry out the threat.

If convicted, Saville faces up to five years in prison on each count, a fine of up to $250,000, and supervised release.

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