Florida Man's Unhinged Conversation With Grok Chatbot About Killing Epstein Clients With Machete Lands Him In Jail

"If I could see you dead. It would be worth it all. Fear God."

Florida Man's Unhinged Conversation With Grok Chatbot About Killing Epstein
31-year-old Terrell Bailey-Corsey was arrested after making violent threats on X while interacting with Grok, the platform's AI chatbot.

A Florida man is behind bars after firing off a series of violent online threats directed at supposed clients of convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.

Terrell Bailey-Corsey, 31, was arrested after federal authorities linked him to a string of violent threats posted on X, formerly Twitter, between late June and mid-July.

"You can't fear death, so you can't understand," he allegedly told Grok, the platform's free AI chatbot, on July 15.

"I will KILL EVERYONE ON THE LIST. ON SIGHT. AND THEY ABSOLUTELY DESERVE IT," Bailey-Corsey wrote, according to a criminal complaint. The message specified that he'd use a machete, "so everyone can see the blood and gore of the moment."

An hour later, Bailey-Corsey allegedly targeted three government officials with personalized death threats, writing, "My life means nothing. If I could see you dead. It would be worth it all. Fear God." Names of officials were withheld from the FBI report.

The complaint details a pattern of violent rhetoric on Bailey-Corsey's account, including a post that read, "I don't know what the solution is, but someone's gonna have to clean up a lot of blood when it's all over," a call to "KILL THEM, KILL THEM ALL IF THEY HAVE A NAME IN POLITICS," and another that said, "America First of I want you to f---ing die."

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The threats emerged in the wake of renewed anger online over the Justice Department's handling of the Epstein investigation. In June, the DOJ confirmed it would not be releasing further evidence tied to the sex trafficking case, reigniting conspiracy theories and speculation surrounding Epstein's 2019 jailhouse death, which investigators previously ruled a suicide.

Bailey-Corsey claimed responsibility for the posts, according to court documents. He now faces federal charges related to interstate communication of threats and threatening government officials.

Originally published on Latin Times

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