A federal grand jury in Washington, D.C., has for the second time this week decided against indicting a defendant accused of threatening President Trump.

Public defender Elizabeth Mullin confirmed to The Hill on Tuesday that a grand jury returned a "no bill" against her client, Edward Dana, meaning the panel of District residents decided that the evidence against him was not sufficient to indict.

Dana was arrested after he was seen damaging a light fixture by pulling it off the exterior wall of a restaurant in northwest D.C., according to an FBI affidavit. When approached by Metropolitan Police Department (MPD) officers, he allegedly described himself as a person with "intellectual disabilities" and expressed he did not know why he was being arrested.

Once in an MPD vehicle, Dana said h

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