New Allegation: Jay Jones Said Police Deaths 'Might Make Them Move On,' Ex‑Colleague Says
A former colleague, ex-Del. Carrie Coyner, alleges Jay Jones once said “maybe if a few of them died, that they would move on,” referring to police — a new claim separate from resurfaced 2022 texts that included the line “Gilbert gets two bullets to the head.” Jones has apologized for the 2022 messages and denied the police remark to Virginia Scope, but the revelations have provoked bipartisan fallout with Republicans and Gov. Glenn Youngkin urging him to quit while many Democrats have so far continued to stand by him.
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📌 Key Facts
- Resurfaced August 2022 text messages from Jay Jones included violent, political‑violence language, including the explicit line: "Gilbert gets two bullets to the head."
- Jones issued multiple public apologies—including an on‑camera statement and a statement to CBS—saying he was "embarrassed, ashamed, and sorry," that he took full responsibility, that he reached out to Speaker Todd Gilbert and his family, and his campaign did not challenge the texts' accuracy.
- ABC News reported Jones spoke by phone with Republican Delegate Carrie Coyner after the revelations; that reporting notes a conversation in which Jones described Gilbert’s children dying in the arms of their mother.
- Separately, former Del. Carrie Coyner alleges that in 2020 Jones said, "Well, maybe if a few of them died, that they would move on…," referring to police; Jones denied that allegation to Virginia Scope, saying he "did not say this" and expressing support for law enforcement.
- The revelations prompted sharp Republican condemnations and calls for Jones to drop out—Governor Glenn Youngkin, Attorney General Jason Miyares and Lt. Gov. Winsome Earle‑Sears called the remarks disqualifying—and President Trump and other conservatives publicly urged his withdrawal; Earle‑Sears released a campaign ad linking Jones to Democratic Rep. Abigail Spanberger.
- Many Democrats condemned the violent language (including Rep. Abigail Spanberger and Neera Tanden, who called the texts "awful and disgusting" but described them as a private conversation), yet multiple Democratic officials and committees publicly stood by Jones and have not rescinded endorsements (Sen. Cory Booker has not withdrawn his June endorsement; the Virginia Beach Democratic Committee reaffirmed support).
- The story generated heavy media and commentator reaction across outlets (CBS Takeout segment, Meet the Press, Fox, MSNBC), with some pundits calling for Jones to quit while others urged proportional condemnation of incendiary language across parties.
- Campaign‑finance/context detail: Everytown for Gun Safety formally endorsed Jones in June 2025 and, according to records, gave his campaign $200,000 in August 2025; Fox News reported seeking comment from Everytown.
📚 Contextual Background
- In Virginia, candidates for governor and lieutenant governor run for and are elected to their offices separately rather than on a single ticket.
📰 Sources (12)
Jay Jones said if more police were killed it would reduce shootings of civilians, according to VA lawmaker
New information:
- Former Del. Carrie Coyner alleges a 2020 conversation in which Jay Jones said 'Well, maybe if a few of them died, that they would move on, not shooting people, not killing people,' referring to police.
- This allegation is separate from the previously reported 2022 text messages that included 'Gilbert gets two bullets to the head.'
- Jones has issued a denial to Virginia Scope, saying he 'did not say this' and expressing support for law enforcement.
- Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin publicly called on Jones to abandon his campaign in response to the resurfaced messages and new allegation.
Democrats stand by Virginia AG hopeful who fantasized about killing GOP lawmaker
New information:
- Sen. Cory Booker has not rescinded his June endorsement of Jay Jones (office did not respond to inquiry).
- Offices of Reps. Eugene Vindman, Robert Scott and Suhas Subramanyam did not respond to requests about whether they are rescinding endorsements.
- Rep. Eugene Vindman publicly reaffirmed his support for Jones in a post on X after the National Review report.
- Abigail Spanberger condemned Jones' messages and said he must take responsibility but did not call for Jones to withdraw from the race.
- The Virginia Beach Democratic Committee issued a statement explicitly reaffirming support for Jones and urging voters to 'line up behind' him.
Democratic Virginia AG candidate apologizes for violent, inflammatory texts
New information:
- Jay Jones issued an on‑camera apology over resurfaced 2022 text messages containing violent language.
- CBS News aired a video segment (includes 'The Takeout' discussion) reporting the apology and contextualizing the resurfaced texts.
- The segment names reporters Julia Manchester (The Hill) and Sophia Cai (Politico) as contributors to the discussion.
Gun control group gave six-figure donation to Dem candidate who fantasized about shooting GOP lawmaker
New information:
- Campaign finance records show Everytown for Gun Safety gave Jay Jones $200,000 in August 2025.
- Everytown had formally endorsed Jones in June 2025 and its president John Feinblatt issued an endorsing statement.
- The article quotes Feinblatt's endorsement language and notes Fox News Digital sought comment from Everytown (no response reported).
Liberal MSNBC panelist calls for Virginia AG candidate to drop out over violent text messages
New information:
- MSNBC 'Morning Joe' panelist John Heilemann publicly urged Jay Jones to drop out of the Virginia AG race over the resurfaced violent texts.
- On‑air reactions from MSNBC co‑host Mika Brzezinski (calling the texts 'horrible') and reporting that Neera Tanden also condemned the messages on NBC's 'Meet the Press' were documented.
- The Fox News article reiterates the texts' content (including the line 'Gilbert gets two bullets to the head') and confirms Jones has apologized and said he is 'deeply ashamed.'
Youngkin presses Dems to push Jay Jones off Virginia AG ticket after 'beyond disqualifying' messages surface
New information:
- Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin publicly doubled down and urged Democrats to push Jay Jones off the attorney general ticket in an on‑air Fox & Friends interview.
- Youngkin said on Fox & Friends: 'This is beyond disqualifying' and urged Democrats to 'figure out where their moral compass is.'
- Article notes Jones did not deny the texts, blamed his opponent for planting stories, apologized and said he reached out to Todd Gilbert and his family.
Former Biden official calls Virginia AG candidate Jay Jones' violent texts part of a 'private conversation'
New information:
- Neera Tanden publicly responded on Meet the Press, condemning Jay Jones' violent text messages but characterizing them as part of a 'private conversation.'
- Tanden framed the texts as 'awful and disgusting' while pressing for equivalent condemnation of incendiary language by Republicans (including President Trump) in the same segment.
- The article includes a direct pushback quote from a spokesperson for Virginia Attorney General Jason Miyares criticizing national Democrats for excusing Jones.
Winsome Earle-Sears releases ad linking Abigail Spanberger to Jay Jones after violent texts resurface
New information:
- Winsome Earle‑Sears unveiled a new minute‑long campaign ad linking Abigail Spanberger to Jay Jones after Jones' 2022 violent text messages resurfaced.
- The ad features news‑report clips about the texts, photos of Spanberger and Jones together, audio of Spanberger saying she campaigned with Jay Jones, and ends with on‑screen text 'Reject the insanity. Vote Republican.'
- Earle‑Sears posted to X quoting Jones: 'Jay Jones dreamed of murdering two young kids and their dad over politics' and promoted the ad on social media.
- President Trump publicly weighed in via Truth Social calling Jones a 'radical left lunatic,' urged him to drop out, and endorsed incumbent Virginia Attorney General Jason Miyares.
- The article republishes specific offending text content (dated August 2022) and includes Jay Jones' apology statement acknowledging and apologizing for the messages.
Virginia Dems back AG candidate Jay Jones, despite sinister text messages
New information:
- Multiple fellow Democrats are publicly standing by Jay Jones and none have called for him to end his campaign, even after the texts surfaced.
- Rep. Abigail Spanberger condemned the violent language but said she spoke 'frankly' with Jones and did not call for his withdrawal.
- Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin publicly called on Jones to drop out on Oct. 4, 2025; Republicans (AG Jason Miyares, Lt. Gov. Winsome Earle‑Sears) sharply condemned Jones and called the remarks disqualifying.
- Jones issued an apology and said he reached out personally to Todd Gilbert and his family.
Democrat in Virginia attorney general race apologizes for 2022 texts depicting political violence
New information:
- Jay Jones issued a public apology and said he 'took full responsibility' after the texts surfaced.
- Jones' campaign did not challenge the accuracy of the 2022 texts.
- Jones spoke by phone with Republican Delegate Carrie Coyner following the revelations; reporting notes a conversation in which Jones described Gilbert’s children dying in the arms of their mother.
- Reactions quoted from incumbents and other statewide Democratic candidates (Jason Miyares, Abigail Spanberger, Ghazala Hashmi) are included, adding updated political responses and pressure amid early voting.
Virginia AG candidate faces backlash over violent, inflammatory text messages
New information:
- CBS quoted the explicit line from the resurfaced 2022 texts: "Gilbert gets two bullets to the head."
- Jay Jones issued a direct apology to Speaker Gilbert and his family in a statement to CBS News, saying he is "embarrassed, ashamed, and sorry."
- Named, on‑the‑record condemnations from Rep. Abigail Spanberger, Lt. Gov. Winsome Earle‑Sears, and Vice President J.D. Vance calling for Jones to withdraw or criticizing the remarks were included.