Sean King threatens Dox NY reporters after posting careless stories

Controversial activist Sean King threatened to corrupt twice this week New York Post Journalists rounded up a series of unpleasant stories, threatening to bring back the “pain, misery, and turmoil” their reporting allegedly brought him and his family.

In a series of now-deleted Instagram and Facebook posts, King featured multiple photos of Mail Journalists Isabel Vincent and Kevin Sheehan urged his followers to send photos of them, their homes and their families.

“This is Kevin Sheehan from @NYPost. He’s been attacking me and my family,” King wrote in posts across Facebook, Instagram and his website, all of which included his email address. He sent me pictures of his house. He sent me pictures of him and his family.

Vincent was behind similar threats. “The amount of pain this woman has caused my family is incalculable,” he wrote, asking users to provide her home address. Send me details and photos. Of which. and her home.”

King criticized reporters for two separate stories published each year. On Tuesday, Sheehan co-wrote a story on how to do it King defends his $40,000 purchase of a Mastiff His name is Mars. the story that was Based on a report From the conservative Washington Free Beacon, note how King used donor money from Grassroots Law PAC to make a big purchase. King defended the purchase as necessary to protect his family from the white supremacists who allegedly came to his last three homes.

Meanwhile, his attacks on Vincent seemed to stem from July 2021 story I wrote about King’s new $842,000 home in North Brunswick, New Jersey. The Mail Referred to at the time by King’s overt reputation as a “champion of the poor and dispossessed” seemed to contrast with “a sprawling house on a lake”.

Vincent and Sheehan and New York Post He did not respond to multiple requests for comment. King deleted his posts from Instagram but indicated in an email to The Daily Beast that the same posts were still available on his Facebook page at the time.

When asked to comment, he wrote: “In all my posts yesterday and today I explain everything in great detail.” He later deleted the posts from all the remaining platforms—except for his own website.

in follow Instagram share On Tuesday, the king claimed MailHis reports – which included a photo of his home but not the actual address – led to white supremacists appearing in his home and his children having to change schools.

“Go through my family again and see what happens,” King wrote. “And I’m going back on that promise a few years.”

King also made his threats clear on Wednesday. The entire media uses misinformation and dangerous information about me to make money to spread stories to do me harm. He said on a 10-minute episode of the daily podcast called The Breakdown, I’m at a point in my life where I’m going to have to redistribute this pain to them. What you tried to give me I got back to you. And so when you publicly attack me, you spread false information about me and my family and make us insecure. I will give it all back to you when you show people where I live.”

He continued, echoing the sentiments of his now-deleted social media posts: “When you do, I will give it back to you. This is the game you made. You started this. You have caused pain, misery and turmoil in my family. And I must give that back to your family.”

King, a public activist who boasts millions of followers across his social platforms, has repeatedly come under intense scrutiny of his fundraising efforts and inconsistencies in the money he has raised. The Daily Beast reported in 2020 how King raised millions of dollars for his ambitious reboot of Frederick Douglass. North Star But he failed to fulfill many of the promises he made.

Five years earlier, Beast columnist Goldie Taylor raised questions about how “King raised millions of dollars for everyone from Haitian orphans to families of black men and children killed by police across America. Some of that money went to survivors or families of victims, but many Of the gifts either went to failed projects, or into King’s own pockets, or were unaccounted for.” And in 2019, fellow Black Lives Matter co-star DeRay McKesson Long blog posts Criticizing “bullying” of King’s “immoral behavior” and calling for him to refrain from raising funds further.

King also came under fire last year from the mother of Tamer Rice, the 12-year-old black boy who was murdered by Ohio police in 2014, after the activist allegedly raised money in her son’s name without her knowledge. In a scathing, now-deleted Instagram post, Samaria Rice wrote: “I have never allowed you to raise anything. Together with the United States, you robbed me of killing my son.”



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