A Washington, D.C., grand jury declined to indict an Indiana woman for allegedly threatening to kill President Donald Trump.

In August, U.S. Attorney Jeanine Pirro claimed that Nathalie Jones, 50, threatened the president's life on Instagram and Facebook and in interviews with the Secret Service.

"I am willing to sacrificially kill this POTUS by disemboweling him and cutting out his trachea with Liz Cheney," Jones wrote on Facebook, according to prosecutors. She later told the Secret Service that Trump was a "Nazi" and that she would "carry out her mission of killing" him with a "bladed object."

Federal public defender A.J. Kramer noted in a motion filed on Monday that Judge James E. Boasberg had released Jones to home detention after a grand jury "found no probable cause" to indict her.

"Given that finding, the weight of the evidence is weak," Kramer wrote. "For this reason the Court should release Ms. Jones on her personal recognizance to appear if required."

It was not immediately clear if Pirro would seek another indictment against Jones.

Last month, Pirro's office also failed to convince a grand jury to indict a man who threw a Subway sandwich at a federal officer, and a grand jury voted three times against indicting another man accused of attacking an FBI agent.

"The grand jurors don't take it so seriously. They're like, 'Ah, you know, whatever,'" Pirro told Fox News on Sunday.