Federal and state authorities are investigating a series of anonymous racist text messages that have caused alarm among Black Americans.
The messages, sent to individuals in states such as Alabama, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, and Virginia, urged recipients to report to a plantation to pick cotton—an offensive allusion to the historical enslavement of Black people in the United States.
It remains unclear who is responsible for these texts, how many people have received them, or how recipients were selected.
Monèt Miller, an Atlanta-based publicist, said that when she shared on social media that she had received a text message telling her to report to her “nearest plantation,” she was shocked at how many other Black Americans chimed in to say they had gotten similar messages.
“To find out that all these African American people are getting it, that was the scariest part about it,” she said. “Who is doing that?”
The Federal Communications Commission said on Friday its enforcement bureau was among those probing the incidents.
Louisiana Attorney General Liz Murrill, a Republican, told Reuters on Friday that her office is investigating the text messages, adding that some targets — herself included — also received emails.
Ms Murrill, who is white, said one of the messages hit her personal email box after 8am on Friday local time.
The message greeted her with an ethnic slur and said “Now that trump is president, you have been selected to pick cotton at the nearest plantation” and that “Our guys will come get you in a van.”
She said the FBI was also looking into the messages.
Maryland Attorney General Anthony Brown said his office is fielding multiple reports of racist text messages being sent to Black residents, including children. Officials said the messages appear to be part of a nationwide campaign targeting Black people in the wake of the election.
“These messages are horrific, unacceptable, and will not be tolerated,” Mr Brown said in a statement.
Mr Brown said in an interview that it’s disturbing that children were targeted, sometimes by name, in mass texts that typically rely on datasets collected on adults, such as campaign donors or magazine subscribers.
“This is an intimidating, threatening use of technology” that likely violated multiple laws, Mr Brown said. He said investigators will use “all the tools and resources available to us to hold accountable whoever is behind these text messages.”
The FBI said in a statement it was “aware of the offensive and racist text messages sent to individuals around the country,” and that it was in contact with the Justice Department and other federal authorities on the matter.
“It could be coming from a basement in Baton Rouge, or it could be a basement in Bangladesh,” said Ms Murrill. “It’s obviously intended to play on people’s emotion in the wake of the election. I’m urging people to rise above it, don’t give these malcontents the benefit of capturing any of emotional bandwidth.”
People in at least 21 states received the texts, including high school and college students, CNN and the Associated Press reported.
“These actions are not normal. And we refuse to let them be normalised,” NAACP President Derrick Johnson said in a statement from the civil rights organisation, which advocates for racial justice and rights for Black Americans.
“These messages represent an alarming increase in vile and abhorrent rhetoric from racist groups across the country.”
Some Black Americans have said they fear a roll back of civil rights after Republican Donald Trump, who won Tuesday’s presidential election over Democrat Kamala Harris, takes office on January 20. Trump, who made racist and sexist attacks against his Black opponent, has pledged to end federal diversity and inclusion programs.
“President Trump’s campaign is in no way connected to these text messages,” spokeswoman Karoline Leavitt stated on Friday.
Some of the messages were sent through TextNow, a service that allows people to send texts via an app. TextNow reported that, once notified, they deactivated the responsible accounts within an hour. The company described the texts as part of an “attack,” noting that they were sent over multiple carriers across the country.
In response, some school districts issued warnings and advised students and parents to report any such texts to school staff or local authorities.
In the lead-up to Tuesday’s election, the U.S. saw its largest surge in political violence since the 1970s, including racist incidents targeting supporters of Harris, according to cases documented by Reuters.
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