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President Donald Trump speaks after signing an executive order in the Oval Office of the White House, Monday, Feb. 3, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)

A man from Maine who faced accusations of making death threats against President Donald Trump has been released after the Department of Justice requested his case be dismissed. The decision follows the man’s alleged self-description as a “loose cannon” and his admission of wanting to harm George W. Bush as well.

U.S. District Judge John Woodcock, appointed by President Bush, agreed to drop the charges against Kevin Bell last Tuesday after the DOJ submitted an oral request, as indicated by court documents. The jury trial was set to commence on the same day.

During an interaction with law enforcement in April, Bell reportedly expressed his disdain for Trump, stating, “I wanted to shoot Bush but didn’t, but now Trump is in and I don’t care for him. I’ll just shoot him,” according to a criminal complaint.

The complaint also mentions Bell allegedly encouraging others to target Trump, saying, “I hope POTUS visits Iraq and gets assassinated.”

Judge Woodcock issued an oral order to dismiss Bell’s case last week, without providing a written rationale.

In September, Woodcock had denied a motion to dismiss from Bell’s public defender, which argued that his indictment was “defective” because it “fails to sufficiently articulate the charge he must defend.” Bell also claimed that “even if the indictment did sufficiently allege a charge, his speech is protected by the First Amendment of the United States Constitution.”

Federal prosecutors filed a response in opposition to Bell’s motion to dismiss in early August, saying his claims were “without merit” and that his alleged threats were made “knowingly and willfully” by him. They noted how Bell, who is a pilot, spoke about hijacking commercial aircraft and stated that he “is able to take over a plane and crash it, hurting a lot more people.” He also allegedly claimed he could “do anything he wants” with an aircraft, “like fly to D.C.,” according to court documents.

“True threats fall outside the protection of the First Amendment,” the DOJ said in opposition.

“Bell claims he lacked a subjective awareness of the nature of his threat because he was not aware others may regard the statement as threatening, is autistic and has trouble responding to social cues, was dissatisfied with the government, was making off-color attempts at humor or engaging in political hyperbole, and because there ‘was never any real possibility of violence; because he was far from both Washington, D.C. and President Trump and knew no one in, and had not made arrangements to visit, Washington, D.C.,” prosecutors explained. “While many of those claims are simply irrelevant to the existence of a ‘true threat’ or Bell’s subjective awareness, Bell must raise them — if at all — through the admission of evidence at trial.”

In his September order dismissing that motion, Woodcock stated, “The court concludes that the indictment is legally sufficient and that it is unable to address the defendant’s remaining issues because to do so would require it to go outside the allegations of the indictment and make factual findings appropriate only for a jury.”

It’s unclear what changed between August and December, only that Trump’s DOJ chose to request a dismissal on Dec. 16, according to court records.

In their motion to dismiss from earlier this year, Bell’s defender claimed he is an “autistic person” who has trouble understanding and responding to social cues.

“He allegedly expressed his initial support for and then, his disappointment in President Trump,” the motion said. “He made these alleged statements while dissatisfied with the government and the state of the world. Any statement he allegedly made during the conversation was nothing more than an off-color attempt at humor — political hyperbole — and not a serious expression of any intent to commit unlawful violence.”

The Justice Department did not respond to Law&Crime’s requests for comment on Tuesday, nor did Bell’s federal defender. The Portland Press Herald was able to reach a federal prosecutor last week who said he couldn’t discuss the case. Bell’s lawyer did not respond to the Herald’s requests for comment, either.

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