Speakers in recorded exchange dispute labeling of armed encounter as "domestic terrorism"
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Two unidentified speakers in a recorded exchange disagreed over calling a man who arrived armed at a federal law enforcement operation a "domestic terrorist," with one saying the label from Kristi Noem was personally painful and the other arguing the act met the definition of domestic terrorism.
Two unidentified speakers in a recorded exchange disagreed sharply over whether a man who arrived armed at a federal law enforcement operation should be described as a "domestic terrorist." Speaker 1, speaking of the individual personally, said it was "heartbreaking to see the video" and that it "hurt worse than anything" to hear Kristi Noem call him a "domestic terrorist."
Speaker 2 countered by offering a legal-style definition: "When you perpetuate violence against a government because of ideological reasons and for reasons to resist and perpetuate violence, that is the definition of domestic terrorism." Speaker 2 added that the person "came with weapons and ammunition to stop a law enforcement operation of federal law enforcement officers" and said, "That's the facts."
The exchange centers on two distinct claims: a personal defense and emotional reaction to the individual involved, and a separate assertion that the actions — arriving armed with the apparent intent to disrupt a federal law enforcement operation — meet a commonly used definition of domestic terrorism. The record contains no legal determination, charge, or formal finding; Speaker 2 framed the statement as factual but did not cite a statute or judicial ruling in this exchange.
Kristi Noem is named in the record as the person who applied the label criticized by Speaker 1; the transcript does not provide further context for her remarks within these segments. No votes, motions, or formal outcomes appear in the recorded exchange.
