NYPD, FBI Probe Gracie Mansion TATP IEDs as ISIS‑Inspired Terrorism; Rogan Criticizes CNN’s Deleted Tweet on Bombing Suspects
During dueling protests outside Gracie Mansion, 18-year-old Emir Balat and 19-year-old Ibrahim Kayumi were arrested after allegedly igniting and throwing improvised explosive devices packed with nuts, bolts and screws—law-enforcement officials say preliminary testing found at least one device contained TATP—one device partially ignited and self‑extinguished near officers while the NYPD Bomb Squad rendered both safe and turned the case over to the FBI Joint Terrorism Task Force and U.S. prosecutors, who executed search warrants in Pennsylvania and New Jersey. Federal complaints charge the men with multiple terrorism and explosives offenses alleging ISIS inspiration and a desire to carry out a larger attack, and the case drew controversy after CNN deleted a tweet describing the suspects as “Pennsylvania teenagers,” a post Joe Rogan publicly criticized for downplaying the incident.
📌 Key Facts
- The incident occurred outside Gracie Mansion during dueling protests — a small anti‑Islam rally organized by far‑right activist Jake Lang and a larger counterprotest — when improvised explosive devices were ignited and thrown into the crowd and near police.
- Recovered devices were described as mason‑jar or sports‑drink‑bottle style IEDs wrapped in tape, packed with nuts, bolts and screws and fitted with a fuse; preliminary testing and Bomb Squad analysis indicated at least one device contained triacetone triperoxide (TATP); devices were rendered safe and sent to an FBI lab at Quantico; a third device found in a vehicle did not contain explosives.
- Video and police accounts say 18‑year‑old Emir Balat allegedly lit and threw a smoking device that self‑extinguished near officers, then retrieved and lit a second device he dropped while fleeing; Balat and a 19‑year‑old companion were tackled and arrested at the scene; additional arrests for disorderly conduct were also made.
- Authorities identified the suspects as Emir Balat (18) of Langhorne, Pennsylvania, and Ibrahim Kayumi (19) of Newtown/Bucks County, Pennsylvania; surveillance reviewed by investigators shows Balat buying a 20‑foot roll of consumer safety fuse on March 2; federal search warrants were executed at both homes, a related New Jersey address, and a Langhorne storage facility where explosive residue was subject to controlled detonations.
- The NYPD, FBI Joint Terrorism Task Force and the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Manhattan opened a terrorism investigation and federal prosecutors filed a criminal complaint charging the two men with multiple counts — including attempted provision of material support to a designated foreign terrorist organization and use of a weapon of mass destruction — and the suspects are being held without bail pending further proceedings.
- Court filings and police say investigators found that the men watched ISIS material, that Balat wrote a note pledging allegiance to the Islamic State and allegedly said he wanted an attack 'bigger than the Boston Marathon bombing,' and that Kayumi reportedly said 'ISIS' when asked why he carried out the attack.
- NYPD Commissioner Jessica Tisch publicly described the incident as an 'ISIS‑inspired' act of terrorism, said federal charges were expected soon and stressed there was no information linking the attack to the war with Iran; Mayor Zohran Mamdani condemned the anti‑Muslim rally’s bigotry while denouncing the attempted bombing; nearby buildings were evacuated and a suspicious vehicle was towed during the response.
- The case drew media and public reaction: CNN posted then deleted an X post characterizing the suspects as 'Pennsylvania teenagers' (and apologized), prompting criticism — including on Joe Rogan’s podcast — that the post downplayed the alleged terrorism; responding NYPD officers (identified as Aaron Edwards and Luis Navarro) were publicly praised for running toward the danger.
📊 Relevant Data
The Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965 significantly increased the number of Turkish immigrants to the United States, rising from small numbers pre-1965 to over 100,000 by the early 21st century.
Turkish immigrants — EBSCO Research Starters
Afghan immigration to the US has been driven by conflict since 1979, with significant increases post-2021 US withdrawal, including through Special Immigrant Visas (SIVs) for Afghans who assisted US forces, resulting in over 150,000 Afghan immigrants by 2022.
Afghan Immigrants in the United States — Migration Policy Institute
From 2014 to 2024, approximately 60% of individuals involved in ISIS-inspired attacks in the US were US-born or long-term residents with immigrant parents from Muslim-majority countries, often second-generation, compared to their 1-2% share of the total US population.
Jihadist Terrorism in the United States — Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS)
US-born Muslims, often second-generation, have a median household income of $50,000, lower than the $60,000 for immigrant Muslims, with 35% of US-born Muslims living in poverty compared to 25% of immigrant Muslims as of 2017 data analyzed in 2018.
Muslims in America: Immigrants and those born in U.S. see life differently in many ways — Pew Research Center
Bucks County, PA, saw its poverty rate remain at around 6.1% from 2010 to 2022, with median household income increasing from $76,555 in 2010 to $99,302 in 2022, while the foreign-born population grew to 10.5% by 2022, amid overall population growth driven by Asian and Hispanic increases.
Bucks County, PA — Data USA
📊 Analysis & Commentary (2)
"A Dostoevsky‑inflected commentary arguing that recent protest violence (such as the dueling demonstrations outside Mayor Mamdani’s residence) reflects deeper moral and psychological currents — humiliation, resentment, and politicized meaning‑making — and that policing alone cannot resolve the causes of modern political rage."
"A sharply critical opinion piece attacking NYC Mayor Zohran Mamdani for his response to the Gracie Mansion ISIS‑inspired IED attack, accusing him and fellow progressives of downplaying Islamist motives and cozying up to anti‑American activists such as Mahmoud Khalil."
📰 Source Timeline (28)
Follow how coverage of this story developed over time
- NYPD Chief Aaron Edwards and Sgt. Luis Navarro are identified as the two officers who ran toward the smoldering IEDs and pursued the suspects near Gracie Mansion.
- Both Edwards and Navarro state they joined the NYPD in the wake of the Sept. 11 attacks and say their decision to charge toward the devices was driven by "instinct" and a desire to save lives.
- Former NYPD Chief John Chell, retired Lt. Joe Cardinale and Blue Lives Matter co‑founder Joe Imperatrice publicly praise the responding officers' actions as a "selfless act of bravery" and highlight the recruitment and morale implications for the department.
- CNN posted, then deleted, an X tweet describing the two Gracie Mansion bombing suspects as beginning what 'could’ve been a normal day enjoying the city during abnormally warm weather' before being arrested for throwing homemade bombs.
- Joe Rogan and guests Francis Foster and Konstantin Kisin publicly criticized the CNN tweet on Rogan’s podcast for downplaying the seriousness of the attack and, in Kisin’s view, implying protesters had thrown the bombs rather than being attacked.
- CNN issued a follow‑up post apologizing for the original tweet’s framing; Rogan read parts of that apology on air, questioning whether CNN had tried to 'soften' a terrorism incident.
- Phantom Fireworks released surveillance footage that appears to show Emir Balat buying 20 feet of consumer fireworks safety fuse on March 2, 2026, at its Penndel, Pennsylvania store for $6.89.
- The video shows the buyer presenting what appears to be ID, filling out a form, and paying cash for the fuse, and the company publicly identified the man as Balat.
- The article confirms Balat is a senior at Neshaminy High School who has been in a virtual program since September and that Kayumi graduated in 2024 from Council Rock High School North.
- The FBI conducted controlled detonations of explosive residue found at a Langhorne storage facility as part of the investigation.
- According to the federal complaint, Balat told investigators he hoped to accomplish something 'even bigger' than the Boston Marathon bombing.
- Dispatch logs show three calls to 911 or non‑emergency lines from suspect Ibrahim Kayumi’s family home in Newtown, Pa., at 4:15 p.m. and 9:19 p.m. on Saturday and 8:54 p.m. on Sunday following the alleged attack.
- Kayumi’s mother reportedly filed a missing‑person report after last seeing him around 10:30 a.m. Saturday, several hours before the alleged bombing attempt in New York.
- Background details on Kayumi’s and Balat’s families, including their parents’ Afghan and Turkish origins, naturalization years, prior litigation over citizenship delays, and the approximate $2.2 million estimated value of the Kayumi home.
- Quote from Kayumi’s father saying the family feared their son might have killed himself when he did not return home and did not call as usual.
- Neighbor testimony describing the Balat family as 'absolutely lovely people' with 'zero suspicious stuff' observed at their house.
- Surveillance footage shows 18-year-old suspect Emir Balat purchasing a 20-foot roll of consumer fireworks safety fuse at a Phantom Fireworks store in Penndel, Bucks County, Pennsylvania, on March 2.
- Phantom Fireworks’ vice president and general counsel confirms the single-item purchase and price — $6.89 including tax — and provides a detailed description of the transaction.
- The article lays out a specific timeline tying the March 2 fuse purchase to the alleged March 7 ISIS-inspired attack outside Gracie Mansion in which Balat and 19-year-old Ibrahim Kayumi are accused of throwing improvised explosive devices toward protesters and police.
- Additional detail on the protest context: the primary event was titled “Stop the Islamic Takeover of New York City: Stop New York City Public Muslim Prayer” with about 20 participants, and a counterprotest titled “Run the Nazis out of New York City: Stand Against Hate” peaked at roughly 125 people.
- New narrative details on the alleged attack sequence: Balat is accused of throwing an ignited device that landed in a crosswalk near officers, then taking a second device from Kayumi, lighting it, fleeing, and dropping it between East 86th and East 87th Streets before both men were arrested.
- Phantom Fireworks’ Penndel, Pennsylvania showroom surveillance footage allegedly shows Emir Balat buying a 20‑foot roll of consumer fireworks safety fuse on March 2, 2026.
- Phantom Fireworks Vice President and General Counsel William Weimer confirms the single item purchased was a 20‑foot consumer safety fuse and the total price was $6.89 including tax.
- The article provides a detailed sequence of the March 7 Gracie Mansion incident, describing two devices Balat allegedly ignited and threw or dropped near police and the route he ran on East End Avenue before arrest.
- It restates that Balat and Ibrahim Kayumi now face five specific federal charges, including attempted provision of material support to ISIS and use of a weapon of mass destruction.
- CBS obtained and reviewed Phantom Fireworks surveillance video showing 18‑year‑old suspect Emir Balat entering the Penndel, Pennsylvania store at 12:46 p.m. on March 2 and purchasing a 20‑foot roll of safety fuse for $6.89 including tax.
- Phantom Fireworks vice president and general counsel William Weimer confirmed to CBS that the FBI contacted the company’s national security director on Monday regarding the purchase and provided contextual comments that the single‑roll fuse sale was "nothing remarkable" in real time.
- The article provides a detailed narrative of Balat’s alleged actions during the March 7 Gracie Mansion incident based on NYPD Commissioner Jessica Tisch’s account: the first ignited device hit a barrier and self‑extinguished near officers; Balat then retrieved and lit a second device from co‑defendant Ibrahim Kayumi before dropping it while running.
- Law‑enforcement sources described the IEDs’ construction more specifically as a sports‑drink bottle filled or partially filled with explosive material placed inside glass jars and surrounded by metal fragmentation such as nuts and bolts.
- The story reiterates that prosecutors allege in a complaint that Balat said he was inspired by ISIS and wanted the attack to be "even bigger" than the 2013 Boston Marathon bombing, and confirms that both Balat and Kayumi face five federal counts related to terrorism and explosive materials, with a federal indictment pending.
- Homeland-security analyst Juliette Kayyem characterizes one recovered device as a 'very sophisticated, deadly IED' containing TATP that could have killed or injured 'over at least 100 people' if it had detonated in the dense crowd.
- Kayyem emphasizes that the two Pennsylvania teenagers had no criminal records or obvious organizational ties, describing the case as an example of diffuse, largely online ISIS radicalization among isolated young men.
- The discussion explicitly links rising concern over ISIS-related threats to the backdrop of the U.S.–Israeli war with Iran and notes that the incident comes as federal funding for the Department of Homeland Security is uncertain.
- Kayyem contrasts older post‑9/11 counterterrorism models—focused on tracing travel, training, and known network ties—with today’s challenge of detecting self‑radicalizing individuals who leave few detectable traces until they act.
- Defense attorney for Emir Balat claims Balat and co-defendant Ibrahim Kayumi were 'strangers' and had no prior family, school, or cohabitation ties despite living about 10 miles apart in suburban Bucks County, Pennsylvania.
- Balat is an 18‑year‑old high-school senior finishing three remaining classes remotely in the Neshaminy School District; Kayumi graduated in 2024 from Council Rock High School North.
- The article reiterates that both men are being held without bail on federal charges including attempting to provide material support to ISIS and using a weapon of mass destruction.
- Visual details and local reporting on FBI searches of both defendants’ homes in Newtown and Langhorne, Pennsylvania, including neighborhood context.
- Further detail on Balat’s alleged handwritten pledge of allegiance to the Islamic State at the precinct and his alleged attempt to flash what officers believed to be an ISIS-style hand salute while being processed.
- Confirms again that the two suspects are 18‑year‑old Emir Balat of Langhorne, Pennsylvania, and 19‑year‑old Ibrahim Kayumi of Newtown, Pennsylvania, who traveled from Bucks County to Manhattan the day of the attack.
- Notes that both men have been charged federally with material support to a designated foreign terrorist organization and use of a weapon of mass destruction, aligning with but not expanding on earlier charging details.
- Adds that CNN posted, then deleted, an X post describing them simply as 'Pennsylvania teenagers' whose lives 'drastically changed,' and that CNN publicly acknowledged the post 'failed to reflect the gravity of the incident.'
- Documents a wave of criticism from commentators, advocacy groups and at least one member of Congress accusing CNN of downplaying or sanitizing an ISIS‑inspired bombing by focusing on the suspects’ youth rather than alleged terrorism.
- NPR identifies both suspects as Pennsylvania residents, ages 18 (Emir Balat) and 19 (Ibrahim Kayumi), and says they allegedly targeted right‑wing protesters at an anti‑Muslim protest outside Mayor Zohran Mamdani’s official residence.
- The article notes that Balat and Kayumi allegedly began talking to authorities after arrest and waived their Miranda rights, according to newly filed court documents.
- Those documents say the two told police they watched ISIS material on their phones, and that Balat wrote he had 'pledged allegiance to the Islamic state' and wanted an attack 'bigger than the Boston Marathon bombing.'
- ABC identifies that journalists photographed Emir Balat hurling a lit, smoking device later found to contain TATP, which self‑extinguished without injuring anyone.
- Details that a second device was dropped by Balat near police officers before he tried to flee and was tackled and arrested.
- Confirms that some recovered devices are still undergoing testing and that the FBI is conducting multiple searches, including examination of a Pennsylvania storage unit.
- Adds defense counsel Mehdi Essmidi’s characterization of Balat as a confused 18‑year‑old with 'complicated stuff going on' who 'doesn’t have any idea what he’s doing,' and that Balat and Kayumi had not known each other long.
- Quotes NYPD Commissioner Jessica Tisch saying there is no indication so far that the attack is linked to the ongoing war in Iran.
- Federal investigators executed a search warrant Monday evening at a Public Storage facility in Langhorne, Pennsylvania, described by a federal source as connected to the ongoing terrorism investigation.
- Helicopter footage showed a large federal and local law‑enforcement presence at the Langhorne storage complex as agents conducted the search.
- The article republishes images from the federal complaint showing suspect Emir Balat allegedly handling Device‑1 and Device‑2—including descriptions that Device‑1 was mason‑jar‑sized, contained TATP, and had nuts and bolts taped to the exterior—providing additional visual and technical detail on the alleged IEDs.
- PBS segment confirms that federal prosecutors have now formally charged two men with attempting to support ISIS after allegedly bringing bombs to a New York City protest.
- The piece frames the event as part of a broader security response in Europe, with several European countries stepping up security after explosions in Norway and Belgium, tying the New York case into a wider threat environment.
- The segment reiterates that the Justice Department says it has reached a tentative antitrust agreement with Ticketmaster and Live Nation, indicating DOJ’s terrorism and antitrust actions were both announced or highlighted on the same day.
- Federal prosecutors in the Southern District of New York have filed a criminal complaint against Emir Balat and Ibrahim Kayumi, formally charging them with five federal offenses: attempted provision of material support to a designated foreign terrorist organization, use of a weapon of mass destruction, transportation of explosive materials, interstate transportation and receipt of explosives, and unlawful possession of destructive devices.
- Prosecutors allege that after his arrest Balat said he and Kayumi wanted to carry out an assault 'bigger than the Boston Marathon bombing' and that Balat later wrote a note pledging allegiance to the Islamic State.
- The article specifies that NYPD body‑camera footage captured Kayumi responding 'ISIS' when asked why he carried out the attack, and notes that preliminary testing indicates at least one of the devices contained TATP.
- Balat and Kayumi appeared in shackles in federal court in Manhattan, with a preliminary hearing set for April 8.
- The right‑wing rally outside Gracie Mansion was led by Jake Lang, a far‑right provocateur previously charged with assaulting a police officer on Jan. 6, 2021, and later pardoned by President Trump.
- Lang billed the event as a 'Stop the Islamic Takeover of New York City' demonstration, which devolved into clashes with a large crowd of counterprotesters.
- Commissioner Jessica Tisch said three members of Lang’s group were charged with disorderly conduct and a fourth with unlawfully using pepper spray during the rally.
- Mayor Zohran Mamdani and his wife, Rama Duwaji, were not at Gracie Mansion when the devices were thrown.
- The article reiterates that NYPD, federal prosecutors and the FBI’s Joint Terrorism Task Force are working together, and notes that Tisch and U.S. Attorney Jay Clayton were expected to release a criminal complaint against the suspects later Monday.
- Tisch explicitly said investigators have not linked the action to the joint U.S.–Israel military campaign in Iran, pushing back on an obvious war‑related narrative.
- NYPD Commissioner Jessica Tisch explicitly said NYPD and FBI are investigating the incident as an 'act of ISIS‑inspired terrorism' and that federal charges are expected to be unsealed soon.
- Tisch confirmed that at least one of the two devices thrown Saturday was made with triacetone triperoxide (TATP), a high‑explosive commonly used in IEDs worldwide.
- Officials disclosed that a third device, which did not contain explosive material, was discovered and rendered safe Sunday in a vehicle near the protest site.
- Mayor Zohran Mamdani publicly condemned the anti‑Muslim protest as rooted in 'bigotry' while also defending organizer Jake Lang’s right to protest and stressing that 'New York City will never tolerate violence.'
- Authorities stated there is currently no evidence linking the attempted attack to the Iran war, though the city remains on a heightened state of alert because of that conflict.
- NYPD Commissioner Jessica Tisch publicly confirmed the incident is being investigated as an 'act of ISIS-inspired terrorism.'
- Tisch stated there is currently no information linking the incident to Iran or the war in Iran, explicitly distancing it from overseas conflict.
- The article specifies that both suspects are in custody but had not yet been charged at the time of the press conference.
- Detailed description that one device partially ignited and extinguished a few steps from police, while a second device dropped by the same person did not appear to ignite.
- Clarifies that a suspicious Honda Civic was removed by flatbed truck after nearby buildings were evacuated, and streets were then reopened.
- NYPD Commissioner Jessica Tisch said the incident is being investigated as an act of "ISIS-inspired terrorism" and that authorities are examining whether the suspects were inspired by ISIS.
- Tisch stated investigators currently have no information connecting the incident to Iran or the ongoing war with Iran.
- ABC’s account adds on-the-record details that the protest was a "Stop the Islamic Takeover of New York City" event led by far-right activist and Jan. 6 defendant Jake Lang, recently freed under Trump clemency and now running for U.S. Senate in Florida.
- Police described one device as a smoking object filled with nuts, bolts, screws and a hobby fuse that extinguished itself near officers, and a second device that did not ignite; both were thrown or dropped by the same individual.
- Authorities evacuated nearby buildings and towed away a Honda Civic from East End Avenue between 81st and 82nd Streets as part of the response.
- CBS piece reinforces that the FBI’s terrorism unit is leading the investigation into the IEDs thrown during dueling protests outside Gracie Mansion, the official residence of the New York City mayor.
- Confirms again that two men have been arrested in connection with the incident, aligning with prior reporting.
- Frames the incident clearly as having begun with an anti‑Islam protest that drew counter‑protesters, underlining the protest context for the attack.
- Federal agents on Monday served search warrants in Bucks County, Pennsylvania, at the homes of suspects Emir Balat and Ibrahim Kayumi, who remain in custody.
- Investigators also executed a search warrant at a related address in New Jersey.
- An NYPD source reiterated that the devices thrown into the NYC protest crowd were packed with nuts, bolts and screws and contained a chemical substance inside a taped canister with a fuse.
- Confirms that one of the devices was thrown directly into a crowd during the protest outside the mayor’s official residence.
- Reiterates the FBI is specifically 'investigating two men' in connection with the incident, aligning with prior reporting on two arrested suspects.
- Frames the protest outside Gracie Mansion as having 'turned violent' when the bomb was ignited and thrown, underscoring crowd‑safety risk.
- NYPD cordoned off East End Avenue between 81st and 82nd Streets on Sunday and publicly urged residents to avoid the area due to 'ongoing police activity' linked to the Gracie Mansion IED case.
- Fox cites NYPD sources saying the Sunday operation is directly connected to the investigation of the two devices recovered during Saturday’s dueling protests outside Gracie Mansion.
- Three federal law‑enforcement sources told Fox that one suspect allegedly shouted 'Allahu Akbar' before throwing the IED into the crowd.
- Retired NYPD inspector Paul Mauro told Fox the devices were allegedly filled with TATP, calling it a 'favorite of real terrorists,' and said a vehicle registered to a relative of one of the suspects was located in the Upper East Side area.
- The NYPD Bomb Squad x‑rayed both devices, rendered them safe, and they are being transported to the FBI lab at Quantico for further analysis.
- NYPD Commissioner Jessica Tisch said Bomb Squad analysis shows the first device was 'in fact, an improvised explosive device that could have caused serious injury or death,' not a hoax device or mere smoke bomb.
- Authorities are continuing analysis of a second recovered device, which has not yet been fully characterized.
- Fox News cites three federal law-enforcement sources saying the two main suspects, Emir Balat and Ibrahim Kayumi, are believed to be U.S. citizens.
- The NYPD confirmed that the Joint Terrorism Task Force — including the FBI and the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York — is working the case with NYPD.
- Mayor Zohran Mamdani issued a public statement condemning both the anti-Muslim protest and the subsequent use of an explosive device, calling the attempted IED attack 'reprehensible.'
- FBI’s Joint Terrorism Task Force has taken the lead and launched a formal terrorism investigation, with terrorism charges described as pending.
- Law enforcement sources told CBS News the devices were sports drink bottles with explosive material set inside glass jars, packed with nuts and bolts, and fused using an M80-type firework.
- Two sources said the IEDs contained triacetone triperoxide (TATP), a highly volatile explosive often synthesized from acetone and hydrogen peroxide.
- Suspects identified as 18-year-old Emir Balat and 19-year-old Ibrahim Kayumi from Pennsylvania; videos show Balat allegedly throwing an ignited device while a voice yells “Allahu Akbar.”
- Investigators are examining whether at least one suspect was inspired by ISIS messaging and are reviewing overseas travel by both men, including trips to Istanbul and Saudi Arabia.
- Search warrants are expected to be executed in Pennsylvania and New Jersey as part of the investigation, and detailed travel timelines for both suspects are provided.
- Identifies the 18-year-old counter-protester as Emir Balat and the 19-year-old alleged accomplice as Ibrahim Nikk.
- Details that Balat allegedly lit and threw one ignited device that landed in a crosswalk near officers, then retrieved and lit a second device before dropping it as he fled.
- Describes the two protests by name: “Stop the Islamic Takeover of New York City: Stop New York City Public Muslim Prayer” (roughly 20 participants) and “Run the Nazis out of New York City: Stand Against Hate” (about 125 participants).
- Specifies that the anti-Islam protest was organized by individuals associated with pardoned Jan. 6 rioter Jake Lang, who used pepper spray on counter-protesters prior to the device incident.
- Provides technical description from police that the devices were jars wrapped in black tape, with nuts, bolts and screws inside and a hobby fuse, and that X-rays have not yet confirmed presence of energetic material.
- Reports three additional arrests at the scene for disorderly conduct and obstructing traffic, and notes continuing K‑9 and manual sweeps that have not found additional devices as of Saturday evening.
- AP version confirms the counterprotester "lit and threw" a device containing nuts, bolts and screws at the anti-Islam crowd after someone from that group used pepper spray on counterprotesters.
- Commissioner Jessica Tisch states the device struck a barrier and extinguished itself a few feet from police officers and that a second device was dropped after being handed to the same individual.
- Article clarifies all three individuals (the pepper‑spray user, the device thrower, and the alleged accomplice) have been arrested and reiterates uncertainty over whether the devices were functional explosives or hoax devices.
- Piece restates that the anti‑Islam protest was tied to conservative influencer and Jan. 6 clemency recipient Jake Lang, and notes his announced run for U.S. Senate in Florida and prior Minneapolis protest activity.