
A man attacked and poured gasoline on a Virginia city councilman before setting him on fire on Wednesday, according to police.
Danville City Councilman Lee Vogler was attacked at the office of local media outlet Showcase Magazine, where he works, in Danville, a small city roughly 45 miles northwest of Greensboro, North Carolina, police said in a statement.
A man entered the office Wednesday morning and confronted Vogler before dousing him in flammable liquid, according to authorities. Vogler and the suspect then exited the building, where the suspect lit Vogler on fire.
Police said Vogler was airlifted to a hospital and that his condition remains unknown.
Police identified the suspect as Shotsie Michael Buck Hayes of Danville. The 29-year-old fled the scene, but was picked up by law enforcement several blocks from where the incident occurred, police added.
Hayes is in police custody and could not be reached for comment.
Police said that the attack “stems from a personal matter not related to the victim’s position on Danville City Council or any other political affiliation.”
However, attacks on local and national politicians have become more common in the United States in recent years.
In 2020, 14 men were arrested in connection with a domestic terror plot to kidnap Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer and overthrow the state’s government. Last year, President Donald Trump survived two assassination attempts while campaigning for president. In April, Gov. Josh Shapiro’s home was firebombed by a man who disagreed with the governor’s views on the war in Gaza.
And last month, former Minnesota House Speaker Melissa Hortman and her husband were assassinated in what authorities described as a politically motivated attack.
Andrew Brooks, the publisher and owner of Showcase Magazine, addressed the Virginia incident in a video the magazine posted on Facebook. He said that at the time the video was posted, the councilman was awake and en route to a burn center in Lynchburg.
“This type of senseless act of violence has to stop. You do not have the right as a human being to get upset with someone enough to lash out and attempt to harm them in any way, much less this way.”
In a brief phone call, Danville Vice Mayor James Buckner said, “Please keep our fellow council member in your thoughts and prayers.”