Leaked bulletins warn of a significant increase in violent threats following raids on Trump property (Image: EPA/AFP/Getty)

The FBI is facing an “unprecedented” wave of threats against its agents after they raided Donald Trump’s £133m Mar-a-Lago estate.

In a leaked bulletin, the agency and the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) said the warning after last morning’s raid included “so-called ‘Civil War’ and ‘armed rebellion.'”

The confession comes three days after Ricky Schiffer, 42, who called for widespread civil unrest and the death of an FBI agent in a 364 post on Trump’s truth platform, was killed after he opened fire on the FBI Office in Cincinnati.

A bulletin published by CBS News on Sunday added: Playa, Florida.

“These threats are primarily online and occur on multiple platforms such as social networking sites, web forums, video sharing platforms, and image boards.”

The FBI and DHS also said they “have noted an increase in violent threats against federal officials and facilities posted on social media.”

He added that these threats were “to identify proposed targets, tactics or weapons.”

The bulletin also warns that some people are posting personal information about their agents online for fear of being listed.

It said there was an increase in “personally identifiable information of potential targets of abuse, such as home addresses and family identities, shared online as additional targets,” known as “coupling” of the paddy field.

Republican and former FBU agent Brian Fitzpatrick admitted his life was in danger after the raid.

Republican and former FBI agent Brian Fitzpatrick recounts how his life was threatened by “some of the same people” who attacked the FBI in the Mar-a-Lago raid (Image: Face the Nation)

Anti-media and pro-Trump protesters

Anti-media and pro-Trump protesters gather at Trump’s Florida mansion in solidarity with the former president following the FBI’s manhunt (Image: Zach Bennett of DailyMail.com)

Another Trump rally

More Trump supporters showed their strength yesterday at his National Golf Club in Bedminster, New Jersey (Image: Kyle Mazza/Anadolu Agency/Getty Images)

Anti-media and pro-Trump

Another supporter of the former reality TV star protests after the FBI investigation (Image: Anadolu Agency/Getty Images)

Anti-media and pro-Trump

The pro-Trump rally at Mar-a-Lago continued into the evening (Image: Zach Bennett for DailyMail.com)

Late last week, the conservative media outlet Breitbart obtained and issued a search warrant containing the names of two FBI agents involved in a search of Trump’s property.

The FBI and DHS bulletin states: “Potential targets of extremist domestic violence include law enforcement agencies, court officials, individuals involved in conspiracy theories, and ideological groups that challenge their worldview. Opponents may be included.” .

He also warned that the 2022 midterms could be “more turbulent by potential growing threats to ideological opponents, including federal law enforcement officials.”

Brian Fitzpatrick, a Pennsylvania Republican and former FBI agent, said he was told his life was in danger as a result of Trump’s crackdown.

He said it was caused by “some of the same people” who verbally attacked federal law enforcement.

donald trump raises his fist

Trump said the raid was an “invasion” and that the FBI should only ask for classified documents (Image: AFP/Getty Images)

Authorities raided Mar-a-Lago

Authorities raided the outskirts of Mar-a-Lago at 6:30 am last Monday (Image: Cristobal Herrera-Ulashkiewicz/EPA)

Last Monday, agents executed a search warrant at Trump’s resort in Palm Beach, Florida, related to classified documents sought by the National Archives.

After mounting pressure to release the warrant, it was dropped in a settlement between the former president’s attorneys and the Justice Department.

Attorney General Merrick Garland said Thursday that he personally approved a warrant request that was later granted by a federal judge, urging people not to jump to conclusions about the FBI’s actions.

Trump, 76, is seeking the return of the seized documents as he faces a growing number of legal problems.

A congressional panel investigating the Jan. 6 attack on the US Capitol by a Trump supporter said it wanted to build a case that he broke the law in an attempt to defeat him in the 2020 election. is working on it.

Trump’s lawsuit includes allegations of voter fraud and fraud.

Against the former reality TV star, former Elle author Jeanne Carroll sued Trump for defamation in 2019 after the then-president denied her allegations that he raped her in a New York department store in the 1990s. trial is scheduled to begin in February.

In a Monday morning Truth post about the Mar-a-Lago attack, Trump said: Close. Which I was asked to install to the storage listed above.

He called the investigation an “assault” and said the FBI could simply have demanded the documents, adding: flagged. ‘

Upon unpacking the records related to the raid, it is revealed that the agents removed classified records from Trump’s mansion. This includes those marked with TS-SCI, the highest level classification for confidential/confidential information.

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