A strident critic of Florida Governor Ron DeSantis‘ handling of COVID-19 has accused him of involvement in the arrest of her son over online threats the 13-year-old boy is alleged to have made.
Rebekah Jones provided no evidence for her accusation and DeSantis’ spokesman said he had “no idea” about the case. Jones was sacked from her job with the Florida Department of Health in 2020 after clashing with superiors over the presentation of COVID-19 data. “My son has been taken on the gov’s orders,” she said in her tweet on Thursday.
DeSantis’ national profile is growing as the strong second favorite of Republican voters to be the party’s 2024 presidential candidate, after Donald Trump. DeSantis achieved prominence by launching an impassioned campaign against what he terms “the woke mind virus,” though critics have accused him of undermining free expression and targeting minorities—accusations he rejects.
Jones, who was defeated as a Democrat candidate in last November’s congressional elections in a Florida district, tweeted: “My family is not safe. My son has been taken on the gov’s orders, and I’ve had to send my husband and daughter out of state for their safety. THIS is the reality of living in DeSantis’ Florida.
“There is no freedom here. Only retaliatory rule by a fascist who wishes to be king.”
My family is not safe. My son has been taken on the gov’s orders, and I’ve had to send my husband and daughter out of state for their safety.
THIS is the reality of living in DeSantis’ Florida.
There is no freedom here. Only retaliatory rule by a fascist who wishes to be king
— Rebekah Jones (@GeoRebekah) April 6, 2023
Jones said her son had been arrested for “digital threats of terrorism,” after he was “anonymously reported” to police over a meme shared in a Shapchat group.
The meme, which Jones posted on Twitter, showed a man apparently asleep with the caption “cops in their car waiting for the school shooter to kill himself so they can go in.”
Jones didn’t provide any evidence to support her assertion that DeSantis played a role in the arrest.
DeSantis’ press secretary, Bryan Griffin, said in a message to Newsweek he had “no idea” about the case.
A spokesperson for the Florida Department of Law Enforcement, a state wide agency, told Newsweek they are “unaware of the allegations” Jones made against DeSantis, and are “not involved in this matter.”
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