Man Indicted on Federal Charges in Hammer Attack at Vice President Vance’s Ohio Home
A federal grand jury has indicted William D. DeFoor, 26, of Cincinnati on three counts over the Jan. 5 vandalism of Vice President JD Vance’s home in Cincinnati’s East Walnut Hills neighborhood. Prosecutors allege a Secret Service team saw DeFoor run along the front fence after midnight, breach the property line armed with a hammer, try to smash the window of an unmarked Secret Service vehicle, then move toward the front of the residence and shatter 14 historic window panes, causing about $28,000 in damage to security reinforcements. The indictment charges him with damaging government property, engaging in physical violence on restricted grounds, and assaulting, resisting or impeding federal officers, carrying potential penalties of up to 10 years on each of the first two counts and up to 20 years on the third. A federal judge has ordered DeFoor held without bond pending trial, while earlier state‑level vandalism and trespass charges were dropped Friday as the case shifted fully into federal court. DeFoor’s lawyer has framed the episode as a "purely mental health issue" and said it was not politically motivated, and Vance has publicly thanked the Secret Service and Cincinnati police while calling the suspect "clearly a very sick individual" and declining to ascribe a motive.
📌 Key Facts
- Defendant: William D. DeFoor, 26, of Cincinnati, indicted on three federal counts related to the Jan. 5 incident at Vice President JD Vance’s home.
- Allegations: Ran onto the property with a hammer, tried to break an unmarked Secret Service vehicle window, and broke 14 historic window panes, with damages to security enhancements estimated at $28,000.
- Legal posture: Charged with damaging government property, physical violence on restricted grounds, and assaulting/resisting/impeding federal officers; faces up to 10 years on each of the first two counts and up to 20 years on the third; ordered detained pending trial as prior state charges were dropped.
📊 Relevant Data
The number of threats investigated by the U.S. Capitol Police against members of Congress increased from fewer than 4,000 in 2017 to over 9,000 in 2023.
Is “radical-left” violence really on the rise in America? — The Economist
In 2024, 23.40% of U.S. adults experienced any mental illness in the past year, equivalent to over 60 million people.
The State of Mental Health in America 2025 — Mental Health America
64% of jail inmates in the U.S. have a mental illness, compared to 21% of the general adult population.
Mental Health Statistics [2024] — University of St. Augustine for Health Sciences
Nearly 1 in 10 U.S. adults (8.9%) reported a mental health crisis in the past year, with prevalence highest among adults aged 18-29 (15.1%) and among Black adults (11.8%).
Mental health crises and help-seeking among US adults in 2024-2025 — Health Affairs Scholar
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