City
Epaper

Twitter employee reveals Trump tweets incited Capitol Hill violence

By IANS | Published: July 13, 2022 10:48 AM

San Francisco, July 13 Former US President Donald Trump incited the violence at the Capitol Hill on January ...

Open in App

San Francisco, July 13 Former US President Donald Trump incited the violence at the Capitol Hill on January 6 by his tweets last year, a former Twitter employee who worked in the content moderation team has told the congressional investigators in a testimony.

Twitter later permanently suspended Trump's account due to the risk of further incitement of violence, which is still banned.

The Verge reported late on Tuesday that the employee, whose identity remains anonymous, pointed to a December 19th tweet from Trump, which asked his supporters to join him in "protest" of the 2020 election results.

"Be there. Will be wild," the tweet read.

According to the Twitter employee, this particular tweet was seen by several people within Twitter as "directly responsible for the violence that followed, which left five dead and has resulted in more than 700 arrests," the report mentioned.

The employee told the January 6th committee that Twitter was wary of the former president's presence on the platform as early as September 2020 when Trump urged members of the violent far-right extremist group, the Proud Boys, to "stand back and stand by".

"My concern was that the former president, for seemingly the first time, was speaking directly to extremist organisations and giving them directives," the employee told the investigators.

If Trump were any other user on Twitter, "he would have been permanently suspended a very long time ago," the employee told investigators.

Dr Donell Harvin, chief of Homeland Security for Washington, DC, said in his testimony that "we got derogatory information from OSINT (open source intelligence) suggesting that some very, very violent individuals were organising to come to DC".

A Twitter spokesperson said that they are "clear-eyed about our role in the broader information ecosystem in regards to the January 6th attack on the US Capitol."

"On January 6th, we leveraged the systems we had built leading up to the election to respond to the unprecedented attack in real-time and are committed to iterating on this work in order to address violent extremism in the US and globally," the company spokesperson was quoted as saying.

Trump was banned from Twitter two days after the storming of the Capitol Hill.

While suspending his account, Twitter had made it clear that such high-profile accounts "are not above our rules entirely and cannot use Twitter to incite violence, among other things".

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: Proud BoysusSan FranciscoTwitterDonald TrumpSan francisco bayTwitter twitterTwitter sevaTwitter cmoTwitter inc.
Open in App

Related Stories

MaharashtraGanesh Chaturthi 2024: Pen's Ganpati Bappa Goes Global as Fifth Batch of 5,000 Idols Shipped to Canada and America

InternationalUS Announces $275 Million in New Security Assistance for Ukraine, Including Ammunitions and Artillery Rounds

InternationalUS Secretary of State Announces New Visa Restrictions on Georgia for Undermining Democracy

HealthH5N1 Bird Flu Human Cases in US & Australia Cause Concern: Know the Reason

International"New India is...": Pak UN envoy brings up "targeted assassinations" in homeland, elsewhere

Technology Realted Stories

TechnologyP&G Hygiene and Health Care appoints Mrinalini Srinivasan as new CFO

TechnologySamsung, Lennox join hands for HVAC business in US, Canada

TechnologyRosneft integrates proprietary IT technologies into all aspects of its operations

TechnologyIndia, Vietnam key beneficiaries as global firms scout for supply chains outside of China: Nomura

TechnologyBlood cancer cases may be rising among young adults in India, say experts