Pascale Ferrier was arrested on Sunday
Credit: REUTERS
A Canadian woman accused of mailing a package containing ricin to the White House included a threatening letter in which she told President Donald Trump to "give up and remove your application for this election," according to court papers filed on Tuesday.
Pascale Ferrier, of Quebec, was arrested on Sunday at the US-Canada border and made her first court appearance on Tuesday afternoon in federal court in Buffalo, New York. She faces a charge of threatening the president.
The envelope containing the toxic substance and the threatening letter was addressed to the White House but intercepted at a mail sorting facility on Friday.
The package, postmarked from Canada, included a letter in which she referred to Trump as "The Ugly Tyrant Clown" and directed him to "give up and remove your application for this election," according to an FBI affidavit filed in the case.
"So I made a ‘special gift’ for you to make a decision. This gift is in this letter," she wrote, according to the affidavit. "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."
Fonda Kubiak, Ms Ferrier's lawyer
Credit: AP
Ms Ferrier appeared in court briefly Tuesday and US Magistrate Judge H Kenneth Schroeder Jr entered a not-guilty plea on her behalf.
Ms Ferrier, who wore a tan jail jumpsuit, had her hands in cuffs and a chain around her waist. A blue mask covered much of her face as she spoke only briefly to answer the judge’s questions.
Through an interpreter and her attorney, she also asked for an identity hearing – which would compel the government to prove that she is indeed the person for whom the arrest warrant was issued – and a probable cause hearing for the government to prove there is sufficient cause to proceed in the case. The judge ordered her held without bail.
Her attorney, Fonda Kubiak, said Ms Ferrier was exercising her rights to those hearings, which were scheduled for Monday.
Ms Ferrier, right, was in court with an interpreter
Credit: REUTERS
"She has a presumption of innocence and that’ll be pursued further after today," Ms Kubiak said outside the courthouse.
During the investigation, the FBI discovered that six additional similar letters appeared to have been received in Texas in September and also had stamps indicating that they’d been mailed from Canada, according to court papers.
Those letters "contained similar language" to the letter that was sent to Trump and were sent to people affiliated with facilities where Ms Ferrier had been jailed in 2019.
Investigators also matched Ms Ferrier’s fingerprints from four of the letters, the complaint said.
In Facebook and Twitter posts in September, Ms Ferrier, 53, also wrote "#killTrump" and used similar wording as she did in the letter, calling him an "Ugly Clown Tyrant," according to the document.
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