Fort Polk soldier charged with threatening to attack synagogue with an AK-47, kill 'every single Jew' inside
Federal prosecutors have charged a 22-year-old U.S. Army soldier stationed at Fort Polk, Louisiana, with threatening to carry out a mass shooting at a synagogue, after the FBI traced recorded audio from a Discord chat room back to his account and identified him as the speaker.
Jakob Marcoulier was arrested on April 23 after an investigation by the FBI and the Department of the Army Criminal Investigation Division, the Washington Times reported. He faces a single count of transmitting a threat in interstate commerce, a charge that carries up to five years in federal prison.
The case began in February 2026, when the FBI's National Threat Operations Center received a citizen tip about a Discord user operating under the handle "el.bostino." Investigators recovered recorded audio from the platform in which prosecutors say the speaker, later identified as Marcoulier, laid out a detailed plan to walk into a synagogue armed with body armor, a helmet, and an AK-pattern rifle fitted with a 75-round drum magazine.
What Marcoulier allegedly said on Discord
The recorded statements, as quoted in federal charging documents, are specific and chilling. The New York Post reported the following alleged quote from Marcoulier:
"After this deployment if the Jews still have reign over our government, I am going to walk into a synagogue with my AK, with a 75-round drum mag, and all of my extra mags, with my level four plates, and my haka helmet that's three plus, and I am going to kill every single Jew I know inside of that synagogue. And that's my goal in life."
That was not a one-off outburst. Marcoulier allegedly continued, addressing other users in the Discord channel directly:
"You guys will never do anything about but I will. I just have to finish this, I have to go back overseas and do what I have to do. And then you'll see me in the news. I promise you."
He also allegedly said he would "still kill these motherf*****s in order to make sure the white youth is f***ing secured." The language leaves little ambiguity about the racial and ideological nature of the alleged threats.
Discord removed Marcoulier from the platform for violating its hateful conduct policy.
FBI tip led to swift identification
The timeline between the tip and the arrest stretched roughly two months. The FBI's National Threat Operations Center fielded the initial report in February, and agents worked to match the Discord handle to Marcoulier's real identity. Court documents cited by the Washington Times confirm that the investigation involved both the FBI and the Army's own Criminal Investigation Division, a joint effort that underscores how seriously military and federal law enforcement treated the threat.
Marcoulier was taken into custody on a Thursday, charged under the federal statute covering threats transmitted in interstate commerce. The U.S. Attorney's Office for the Western District of Louisiana announced the case publicly.
The arrest comes against a backdrop of rising concern about violent threats targeting houses of worship. The FBI recently confirmed that a Michigan synagogue attacker was inspired by Hezbollah and intended to kill as many people as possible, a case that drew national attention to the persistent danger facing Jewish congregations.
U.S. Attorney Zachary A. Keller framed the Marcoulier prosecution as a defense of religious liberty. Keller stated:
"Threats against synagogues and Jewish Americans are threats to the religious freedom promised to every single one of us, and this Office and our law enforcement partners are committed to protecting those freedoms."
Keller also credited the speed of the federal response:
"This case demonstrates the FBI's vigilance and swift action in identifying and taking action against those who perpetrate these threats, and our Office looks forward to seeing justice done in this case."
A soldier in uniform, allegedly plotting mass murder
Marcoulier's status as an active-duty soldier adds a layer of gravity. He was stationed at Fort Polk, a major Army installation in western Louisiana used for pre-deployment training, at the time of the alleged threats. His recorded statements reference a deployment and going "back overseas," suggesting he may have had or expected operational duties abroad.
The case raises hard questions about how someone allegedly harboring this kind of ideology passed through military screening. It also raises questions about what, if anything, his chain of command knew before federal investigators came calling.
The Army has faced broader scrutiny over internal discipline and leadership in recent months. Army Secretary Dan Driscoll recently addressed friction within Pentagon leadership, while the service continues to manage wartime readiness demands.
None of the available reporting indicates whether Marcoulier had access to the weapons he described, the AK-pattern rifle, the drum magazine, the body armor, and the ballistic helmet. Nor is it clear whether any specific synagogue was identified as a target. Those are details that may emerge as the case moves forward.
What is clear is that the alleged threat was not vague. Marcoulier did not, prosecutors say, muse abstractly about violence. He allegedly named the weapon, the magazine capacity, the protective gear he would wear, the target, and the victims, and then told his audience they would see him on the news.
Online extremism and the law enforcement response
The Marcoulier case fits a pattern that federal law enforcement has tracked for years: individuals using online platforms to broadcast violent intentions before acting. Discord, a voice and text chat platform popular with gamers and younger users, has repeatedly surfaced in federal investigations involving extremist threats and planning.
The platform's decision to ban Marcoulier for violating its hateful conduct policy came alongside the federal investigation, though the timing of the ban relative to the arrest is not specified in public filings.
This case also echoes other recent federal prosecutions targeting individuals who planned mass-casualty attacks on houses of worship. A New Jersey man recently pleaded guilty after assembling more than 100 explosive devices intended for a Catholic cathedral in Washington, D.C., another reminder that the threat to religious communities spans ideologies and targets.
Meanwhile, the military continues to operate under significant pressure abroad. With the Pentagon preparing ground operations in the Middle East, the readiness and reliability of every service member matters. An active-duty soldier allegedly plotting domestic terrorism is a problem that extends well beyond one courtroom in Louisiana.
Marcoulier faces up to five years in federal prison if convicted. The charge, transmitting a threat in interstate commerce, does not require prosecutors to prove he took a physical step toward carrying out the attack. The recorded words themselves, if a jury finds them to constitute a true threat, are enough.
No attorney for Marcoulier has been identified in public reporting on the case. Whether he enters a plea, cooperates, or fights the charge at trial remains to be seen.
The people who sit in synagogue pews on Saturday morning shouldn't have to wonder whether the man in uniform swore an oath to protect them or to harm them. When the system works, when a citizen tips off the FBI, agents move fast, and prosecutors file charges, it deserves credit. This time, it appears to have worked. The question is whether it always will.






