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Dayton Gunman Retweeted Longtime Former Forward Contributor

The Twitter account believed to belong to the man who killed nine people in a Dayton, Ohio bar frequently retweeted posts supportive of left-wing figures and movements, including Sen. Elizabeth Warren, antifa protesters and, on a few occasions, longtime former Forward contributor Eli Valley.

Valley, a cartoonist, has risen in prominence during the Trump administration due to his drawings harshly criticizing the Trump administration, which have frequently gone viral when posted on his Twitter account.

Jewish Journal columnist Ariel Sobel (another former Forward contributor) pointed out that some of the gunman’s 10,000-plus tweets were retweets of Valley or of other accounts promoting his work.

Valley rejected the implication that he was in any way responsible for the shooting.

The gunman reportedly had a longstanding interest in violence, with high school classmates claiming that he had a “hit list” of people he wanted to rape or murder. His ex-girlfriend has claimed that he showed her footage of the Pittsburgh synagogue shooting on their first date earlier this year. The suspect was “very specifically seeking out information that promotes violence,” FBI special agent in charge Todd Wickerham told CNN on Tuesday.

Sobel and Valley have been feuding on Twitter for months over differences of opinion on Israel, left-wing politics and Valley’s use of exaggerated physical features and Holocaust imagery to criticize the Trump administration, especially its Jewish members and supporters, for what he sees as their embrace of white nationalism. Valley was even accused of anti-Semitism by Meghan McCain (who is not Jewish) after he drew a caricature mocking her.

But things escalated in May after Sobel accused him of being a misogynist who “abet[s] anti-Semitism” and sends followers to attack his critics. Valley responded by saying the harassment of her was “inexcusable and obscene” but adding that the argument he was abetting anti-Semitism was “grotesque.”

Aiden Pink is the deputy news editor of the Forward. Contact him at [email protected] or follow him on Twitter @aidenpink

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