Crime & Safety

North Bay Man Suspected Of Threatening To Kill Senior Trump Official Indicted By Feds

Prosecutors say man who vowed to "hunt down and kill" official sent threatening emails targeting the victim's former spouse, children.

NORTH BAY, CA — A 64-year-old Napa man suspected of threatening to hunt down and kill a Senate-confirmed federal government official in Washington, D.C. was indicted this week.

Prosecutors say Haddow Mills sent an email on Sept. 25, 2025, declaring, “I will hunt [the victim] down and kill him,” according to a federal indictment unsealed this week.

The indictment alleges that in the months leading up to the threat, Mills sent dozens of harassing and threatening emails to the official’s ex-spouse. In one message, he allegedly wrote, “I still am hunting down [victim’s first name]. He is a dead man walking.”

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Authorities say other emails also contained threats directed at the official, the ex-spouse, and their children.

The emails used terms like “Nazi" and “scum" and threatened to "...hunt you down. I am not kidding. Watch your back bitch.”

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Another read, in part, it was a good thing that, "I can buy a gun and end you and Trump’s lives, just like that” and “I hope you and your family DIE from legalized gunshots to the head.”

The indictment did not identify the Trump official by name, describing him only as a Senate-confirmed federal official based in Washington, D.C., and his ex-wife as living in Virginia.

Mills made his first appearance in federal court Thursday and was released on bond. He is scheduled to return to court May 21 for a status conference before U.S. District Judge Rita F. Lin.

If convicted, Mills faces up to five years in prison and a $250,000 fine for of "transmitting an interstate threat under federal law."

The case is being prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorney Brandon Moore following an investigation by the United States Marshals Service, with assistance from the Napa County Sheriff’s Office and the Arlington County Police Department in Virginia.

Prosecutors emphasized that an indictment is only an allegation, and Mills is presumed innocent unless and until proven guilty in court.

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