Destruction in Chimney Rock, N.C., this month. Local officials said that a man armed with an assault rifle had made a comment about harming Federal Emergency Management Agency workers in the area.
Credit...Allison Joyce/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

Armed Man Arrested After Reportedly Threatening FEMA Workers

William Jacob Parsons was arrested and charged in North Carolina after he was found with a handgun and a rifle at a supermarket where a federal aid vehicle was parked.

by · NY Times

A North Carolina man was arrested on Saturday and accused of threatening federal emergency responders who have been administering aid since Hurricane Helene ravaged parts of the state last month.

The man, William Jacob Parsons, 44, of Bostic, N.C., was charged under a law that makes it illegal to carry a weapon in a way that threatens the public. He was arrested at a supermarket where a Federal Emergency Management Agency bus was parked, according to Capt. Jamie Keever, a spokesman for the Rutherford County Sheriff’s Office. Mr. Parsons had a handgun and a rifle in his possession.

No FEMA personnel were at the site, he said.

The Rutherford County Communications Center received a call on Saturday afternoon that a man armed with an assault rifle had made a comment about harming FEMA workers in the area, according to a statement released by the sheriff’s office.

The man was overheard voicing threats at a gas station in neighboring Polk County, and either a station clerk or a customer alerted U.S. Army soldiers nearby, Captain Keever said. The Army informed the Rutherford County Sheriff’s Office, whose deputies visited the gas station and obtained a description of the man’s vehicle. That information led them to Mr. Parsons at the supermarket.

The arrest occurred after FEMA, which is administering aid to severely flooded counties in the region, directed its employees to stop going door to door to help survivors amid various threats of violence. FEMA workers were still working from designated locations, however.

A person with Mr. Parsons’ name and age has faced misdemeanor criminal charges in the past, court records show, including a charge in 2004 of communicating threats, which North Carolina prosecutors later dropped. Social media pages that appear to be run by Mr. Parsons feature messages supporting Mr. Trump and opposing coronavirus vaccines. One of the posts from 2020 shows the logo of the Three Percenters right-wing militia group and the message “When tyranny becomes law, rebellion is order.”

Hurricane Helene, which made landfall on Florida’s Gulf Coast on Sept. 26 as a Category 4 storm, unleashed heavy rains across the Southeast, killing at least 230 people and leaving entire communities cut off. Since then, officials in devastated areas, including Rutherford County, have had to contend with a barrage of online conspiracy theories and falsehoods, including unfounded rumors that FEMA planned to bulldoze neighborhoods to make way for mining operations.

Mr. Parsons was charged in Rutherford County on Saturday and was released after making a $10,000 bond, according to the statement provided by the sheriff’s office.

He acted alone, the statement said, adding that rumors of “truckloads of militia” in the area were false. Federal officials confirmed that this was their understanding as well.

Zolan Kanno-Youngs and Mike Baker contributed reporting. Alain Delaquérière contributed research.