Georgia Mom Doxxed, Harassed After Being Fired From Polling Place

Georgia Mom Doxxed, Harassed After Being Fired From Polling Place
Early voters stand in line at the State Farm Arena in Atlanta on Dec. 14, 2020. (Megan Varner/Getty Images)
Steven Kovac
11/30/2022
Updated:
12/7/2022
0:00

A simple act of civic involvement has turned the lives of a Georgia family into a nightmare.

Shortly before the polls opened on Nov. 8, Fulton County election workers Laura Kronen and her 16-year-old son were fired and ordered out of the polling place. The reason for the dismissals remains in dispute.

After media outlets picked up the story that Kronen had made posts on her social media accounts while at the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, an aggressive doxxing and cancellation campaign sprouted up. Kronen said her family have since been the target of numerous death threats and thousands of other “vile and threatening messages.”

“The woke social media mob searched out people I know and organizations I do business with to tell them I am a terrorist. Some of my contacts and associates dropped me. Even some conservatives dropped me out of fear,” Kronen told The Epoch Times.

“Doxxers have called our employers, customers, and my publisher making slanderous accusations. This ruined the ratings of the two books I authored and cost my husband’s business suppliers and clients.

“Doxxers posted pictures of us on terrorist watch websites and sent 20,000 social media messages tagged to the police, FBI, and even Child Protective Services.”

William “Trey” Kelly, the chairman of the Fulton County Republican Party, told The Epoch Times he found the Kronen family’s situation “disturbing.”

“Laura Kronen and her family have a good reputation. She loves her country and is concerned about what’s going on in Fulton County,” Kelly said. “I believe Laura was targeted for her political views and her son was fired for no reason.”

The Kronens intend to file a complaint with the Georgia State Elections Commission and are contemplating further legal action.

Election Day

Kronen told The Epoch Times that she believes she and her son were thrown out because of their conservative political beliefs.

According to Kronen, Johns Creek polling place supervisor J. Campbell O’Keeffe walked up and abruptly told the pair they had to leave the building immediately or he would call the police.

“When I asked him the reason, Mr. O’Keeffe gave us no clear answer,” said Kronen. “I told him I wasn’t leaving until I spoke with a higher election official.”

O’Keeffe didn’t respond to The Epoch Times’ requests for comment.

Laura Kronen of Fulton County, Ga. (Courtesy of Laura Kronen)
Laura Kronen of Fulton County, Ga. (Courtesy of Laura Kronen)

Kronen said she then spoke by phone with Fulton County Elections Director Nadine Williams.

An audio recording of the conversation made by Kronen captures Williams explaining to Kronen that she was fired because of some recent tweets.

When pressed by Kronen for specifics, Williams hung up.

Kronen told The Epoch Times that she didn’t accept expressing an opinion on Twitter as a valid reason to fire her and told O’Keeffe she wasn’t leaving until she received an explanation.

As Kronen continued to defend her constitutional right to free expression, she said someone from within the polling place called the police to report a “disorderly person.”

“We were not disorderly. We left the building without incident. Look at the police report. We were not arrested,” she said.

“So, they fired me for exercising my right to free speech. Why did they fire my son? He had nothing to do with my tweets. Was he kicked out merely because of his relationship with me? That’s guilt by association. It’s un-American.”

One of the six Johns Creek police officers that responded to the call from the polling place phoned Williams.

The officer wrote in his report that Williams told him that Kronen had made a derogatory post on social media that mentioned “taking photos/videos in the polling place.”

The police report says, “Williams stated that her office sent the information to the Secretary of State’s office.

“Williams stated that the Secretary of State’s office reviewed Kronen’s social media page and found other posts of concern.”

A spokesperson for the Secretary of State’s (SOS) office told The Epoch Times, “Concerns were expressed by Fulton County, not by our office.”

The spokesperson also said the SOS office was “not aware” of any review or search of Kronen’s social media conducted by SOS personnel.

“Fulton County ultimately made the decision (to fire the Kronens),” the spokesperson said.

Workers scan ballots as Fulton County election chief Richard Barron listens during a press conference at the Georgia World Congress Center in Atlanta on Nov. 25, 2020. (Ben Gray/AP Photo)
Workers scan ballots as Fulton County election chief Richard Barron listens during a press conference at the Georgia World Congress Center in Atlanta on Nov. 25, 2020. (Ben Gray/AP Photo)

Williams didn’t respond to a request for comment.

In a Nov. 3 tweet, Kronen encouraged her Twitter followers to “Stay alert! Report everything you see! Take videos of anything you think might be shady,” but made no mention of taking videos inside a polling place.

“I never said anything about election workers or poll watchers working in precincts using cameras,“ Kronen told The Epoch Times. ”I never urged anybody inside the polling places to do that and would not do it myself.

“I think the authorities inferred something from my words that wasn’t there and used that as a pretext for my firing. What happened to the presumption of innocence until proven guilty?”

Kronen said that she believes she first came under scrutiny from Williams after she asked a couple of questions during a Zoom pep rally for election workers held on Nov. 6, before the election.

“About 120 of us attended. They were singing the song ‘Ain’t No Stopping Us Now,’ and saying things like ‘This is our final push. … We are going to make history in Fulton County … It’s all coming down to us.”

Kronen recorded the 15-minute pep rally on her cellphone.

“My son and I were surprised to hear such things coming from poll workers, so I asked in the chat box why they were chanting and how they intended to make history,” she said. “That’s when I believe Williams flagged me as not one of them.”

Kronen’s contention was confirmed in a Nov. 7 statement from Fulton County that was reported by the fact-checking organization Lead Stories.

The statement says that the day after the pep rally, a Fulton County poll worker complained on social media “about comments made by another poll worker during a virtual event held on Nov. 6.

“Fulton County Registration & Elections shared those concerns with the Secretary of State’s office, who contacted us this morning with additional concerns.”

The statement says that after further discussion with the SOS office, Fulton County decided to terminate the two poll workers.

Jan. 6

The news reports about Kronen’s presence on Jan. 6 at the U.S. Capitol stemmed from a tweet she sent that day.

“I stood up for what’s right today in Washington D.C. The election was a sham. Mike Pence is a traitor. I was tear gassed FOUR times. I have pepper spray in my throat. I stormed the Capitol Building,” Kronen wrote. “And my children have had the best learning experience of their lives.”

She told The Epoch Times that she pulled down that tweet within 10 minutes.

“I realized it was composed in the excitement and enthusiasm of the moment with poorly chosen words that did not accurately describe my actual experience.”

While she never entered the building that day, media reports falsely claimed that she stated in an interview that she had gone inside, Kronen said.

“We were outdoors on the side of the building and so far back in the enormous crowd that we couldn’t even see what was going on. We were four inconspicuous dots in a sea of people.

“My husband, our two sons, and I had walked to the Capitol following the program in front of the White House, in which President Trump told the large audience to go peacefully to the Capitol and make our voices heard.”

According to Kronen, it was a windy day and tear gas was carried by the breeze over thousands of bystanders surrounding the Capitol.

“My throat was burning, and my eyes were watering, causing my makeup to streak over my face,” she said.

“We were just standing there. We did nothing wrong. We were not arrested or charged with anything.”

FBI

Federal law enforcement paid a visit to the family’s Georgia home on Jan. 18, 2021, less than two weeks after the events at the Capitol.

“They came to the door and said they wanted to talk to me. I’m not sure if they were FBI or Secret Service.

“I told them my lawyer would be happy to answer any questions they might have, so send them to him. They never did.

“Strangely, the federal agents informed me that President Biden was coming to town and that it would probably be better if I did not attend the event—as if I ever would,” Kronen said.

The agents visited her again on April 22, 2021.

“I was on my way to play tennis. When I arrived at the court, two cars pulled up. It was the FBI,” she said. “I didn’t realize they had been following me. Once again, I directed them to my lawyer. They never contacted him.

“They weren’t investigating. They were all about intimidation and control. That’s what they do.

“I’m a law-abiding citizen. I’ve never been in any trouble and don’t have so much as a parking ticket.

“Suddenly, I’m Public Enemy Number One!”

The firing of Kronen and her son on the morning of Election Day is to her a great wrong and evidence of a double standard of justice.

“The radical leftist Tom Hayden was arrested, charged, and tried for several felonies in connection with the riots at the Democrat National Convention in 1968.

“He was tried in a Chicago court. Of course, he was acquitted! But the point is, he was there. In fact, he was all over the country inciting protests, especially in California.

“Later, the socialist Tom Hayden was elected to the California state legislature as a Democrat—Yet, my son and I can’t even serve as lowly poll workers in our hometown because we are conservatives and supporters of President Donald Trump.”