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Trump lashes out at CNN in 3am tweet accusing news channel of 'blaming him' for US bomb scares

President turns fire on media amid 'domestic terror' incidents

Harry Cockburn
Friday 26 October 2018 03:41 EDT
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Alarm goes off in CNN newsroom while on air as Time Warner Center evacuated

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Donald Trump has again lashed out at the press while US authorities investigate a spate of attempted bomb attacks in which live devices were sent to CNN and prominent Democrats, including Barack Obama, Hillary Clinton, George Soros and Robert De Niro.

In a tweet posted at 3.14am, Mr Trump said it was “funny” how news organisations can criticise him, yet when he does the same they “go wild and scream ‘it’s just not presidential’”.

The discovery of an explosive device prompted the evacuation of CNN’s offices in New York on Wednesday. A second scare on Thursday evening saw another partial evacuation.

Mr Trump has already condemned the attacks, telling a political rally in Wisconsin on Wednesday his administration would conduct “an aggressive investigation”, and posted a video statement on Twitter.

But since then, he has repeatedly moved to implicate elements of the media.

The day after the bomb scares, which the FBI is treating as “domestic terror”, Mr Trump wrote: “A very big part of the Anger we see today in our society is caused by the purposely false and inaccurate reporting of the Mainstream Media that I refer to as Fake News. It has gotten so bad and hateful that it is beyond description. Mainstream Media must clean up its act, FAST!”

The bomb found at CNN was in a package addressed to former CIA director John Brennan, who reacted to Mr Trump’s tweet, telling him to “look in the mirror”.

“Stop blaming others. Look in the mirror,” Mr Brennan tweeted. “Your inflammatory rhetoric, insults, lies, & encouragement of physical violence are disgraceful. Clean up your act....try to act Presidential.”

The numerous bomb threats unfolded rapidly on Wednesday, with more coming to light on Thursday. None of the ten packages detonated and nobody was injured, but there has also been no claim of responsibility for the attacks.

The incidents have heightened tension in a nation deeply polarised ahead of the midterm elections on 6 November, in which Mr Trump’s Republicans are at risk of losing their majority in the House of Representatives.

Other Democrats have also called on Mr Trump to tone down the rhetoric in the light of the attacks. On Thursday, former vice president Joe Biden, who was another of those targeted, said: “We've got to get off this hate machine. We've got to come together.”

Meanwhile, conservative commentators have repeatedly questioned the existence of the bombs, and suggested they could be a Democrat hoax ahead of the elections.

One of Fox News’s journalists (a news organisation Mr Trump has repeatedly praised since taking office), suggested the incident had been staged.

Lou Dobbs, who hosts an eponymous show on Fox Business, wrote in a subsequently deleted tweet: “Fake News — Fake Bombs,” adding “Who could possibly benefit by so much fakery?”

Meanwhile, Former FBI Assistant Director Chris Swecker went on Fox News on Wednesday and suggested the bomb threats were carried out by someone “trying to get the democratic vote out” ahead of the midterm elections.

At a media briefing on Thursday, authorities said at least some of the bombs were sent through the US mail, the Press Association reported.

Those targeted were in New York, Delaware and Washington DC, Florida and California.

The devices were packed in envelopes with bubble-wrap interiors and bearing six American flag stamps.

The return address was written as being Florida Representative Debbie Wasserman Schultz, the former chairwoman of the Democratic National Committee.

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Investigators are now examining a postal facility in Opa-locka, Florida, where they believe some of the packages originated.

“Some of the packages went through the mail. They originated, some of them, from Florida,” Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen said in a television appearance on Thursday.

“I am confident that this person or people will be brought to justice.”

The bombs seized on Wednesday were about six inches long and packed with powder and broken glass, and made from PVC pipe covered with black tape, according to investigators who viewed X-ray images.

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