Trump-loving teens who threatened to execute minority classmates suffer minor consequences -- so far
People in a Philadelphia suburb dressed up like KKK members and posted it to social media. Image via Twitter.
December 19, 2018
A group of Pennsylvania high school students left a threatening racist letter for local minority families before posing as Ku Klux Klan members on social media. In response, their fellow students staged a walkout protest.
CBS Philly reported that four students at Strath Haven High School in the town of Swarthmore were suspected of leaving the threatening letter at the homes of four minority families.
The letter's writers addressed the hate-filled message to "non-US citizens" and told them that because Donald Trump is now president, they need to leave the country by "9 a.m. the next day" or suffer extreme and violent consequences.
"If we discover that you are not in New Mexico (city), then we will either 1. put [you] up for adoption or 2. execute u and ur kidosĀ [sic]," the letter read.
Along with the letter, four female Strath Haven students were suspected of being behind a Snapchat post that featured two people wearing makeshift KKK hoods.
On Wednesday, WPVI reported, students walked out in protest of their classmates who sent the letter and posted the racist Snapchat photos.
According to one Twitter user, the students protested because the girls believed to be involved in the racist stunts were allowed back to school. A Facebook user who claimed to be a mother to Strath Haven students also said that as far as she understood, the girls had only been "dismissed early" for their involvement.
You can see photos of the letter and Snapchat post and video of the walkout below: