Guns rights advocate gets year in jail for 8-month campaign of harassment targeted at Parkland mass shooting victim’s father

Must read

Buyers of EVs with batteries from China get dinged under new Biden administration rules for tax credits

The government proposed new rules Friday that could make it harder for electric vehicles to qualify for a full $7,500 federal tax credit, complicating...

Even the U.S. president’s return-to-office push is being ignored by workers: ‘They aren’t coming back’

Plenty of CEOs have been fuming about workers ignoring return-to-office mandates. At some companies, including Amazon, managers now have the green light to fire...

Jerome Powell dispels Wall Street’s dream of near-term interest rate cuts by arguing it would be ‘premature’ while leaving the door open to more...

Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell pushed back against Wall Street’s growing expectations of interest-rate cuts in the first half of 2024, saying the committee...

Rep. George Santos becomes only the 6th Congress member in U.S. history to be expelled from his job by colleagues

The House voted on Friday to expel Republican Rep. George Santos of New York after a critical ethics report on his conduct that accused...

Fred Guttenberg

Fred Guttenberg, father of Jaime Guttenberg, holds a picture of his daughter, Monday, March 5, 2018, as he listens to questions from the media in front of Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School, in Parkland, Fla.

Jose A. Iglesias/Miami Herald via AP, File

A California property manager was sentenced to a year in federal prison for sending more than 200 vile online messages to a father of a teenage girl who died in the 2018 massacre at Florida’s Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School.

James Catalano, 62 of Fresno, was sentenced Friday by U.S. District Judge Robert Scola in Miami after pleading guilty in March to cyberstalking. Prosecutors called the messages he sent Fred Guttenberg “callous and cruel.”

Guttenberg’s 14-year-old daughter Jaime Guttenberg was murdered in the Feb. 14, 2018, shooting in Parkland that left 14 students and three staff members dead. Catalano also received three years probation and must undergo mental health treatment.

Catalano sent Guttenberg messages for eight months starting in December 2021 that celebrated Jaime Guttenberg’s death and reveled in the wounds she suffered. He also mocked the sadness and loss Guttenberg feels and directed obscenities, slurs and disturbing insults to him and his daughter.

Catalano told investigators he was angry at Guttenberg for his outspoken advocacy for stronger gun laws since his daughter’s death. He told them he believed Guttenberg was using his daughter’s death “to push his political agenda” and was “trying to put (Guttenberg) in check by sending him the messages.”

“By his own admission, the defendant was motivated to stalk the victim and send him heinous messages simply because he disagreed with the victim’s political views,” Assistant U.S. Attorney Arielle Klepach wrote in court documents. “He capitalized on the victim’s grief and the horrific nature of his daughter’s death in order to silence him.”

She wrote that Catalano sent similar messages to others, but he has not been charged in those cases.

Guttenberg said Monday that the sentence “is a big deal” and sends a message to those who cyberstalk the families of shooting victims that they will be caught and punished. He said Judge Scola agreed that while none of the messages contained a direct threat, in their totality they constituted one.

Catalano’s attorneys did not immediately return a call Monday seeking comment.

The former student who murdered Jaime Guttenberg and the others is serving a life sentence.

Get the business news that matters most to you with our customizable digest, Fortune Daily. Register to get it delivered free to your inbox.

More articles

Latest article

Buyers of EVs with batteries from China get dinged under new Biden administration rules for tax credits

The government proposed new rules Friday that could make it harder for electric vehicles to qualify for a full $7,500 federal tax credit, complicating...

Even the U.S. president’s return-to-office push is being ignored by workers: ‘They aren’t coming back’

Plenty of CEOs have been fuming about workers ignoring return-to-office mandates. At some companies, including Amazon, managers now have the green light to fire...

Jerome Powell dispels Wall Street’s dream of near-term interest rate cuts by arguing it would be ‘premature’ while leaving the door open to more...

Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell pushed back against Wall Street’s growing expectations of interest-rate cuts in the first half of 2024, saying the committee...

Rep. George Santos becomes only the 6th Congress member in U.S. history to be expelled from his job by colleagues

The House voted on Friday to expel Republican Rep. George Santos of New York after a critical ethics report on his conduct that accused...

The case for unlocking the power of disability inclusion

My mom has multiple sclerosis. She was diagnosed when I was just 10 years old. I remember thinking then, and many times since, that she...