A growing number of Trump administration officials are moving out of their homes and into military housing where they can be shielded from protests and political violence.
The Atlantic first reported on the moves last Thursday.
Stephen Miller, White House deputy chief of staff for policy, is the most recent addition to seven high-ranking officials who have been encouraged to make the move. Miller joined Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem, Secretary of State Marco Rubio, Secretary of War Pete Hegseth, Army Secretary Dan Driscoll, another senior political appointee to the Army and one other senior White House official.
The morning after conservative activist Charlie Kirk was assassinated, Miller’s wife said she was threatened in front of her home.
On Fox News, Katie Miller told Sean Hannity, “The morning after our dear friend Charlie was assassinated, I take a step out on my porch and I had a lady saying, ‘I’m watching you.’”
After that incident, someone passed out flyers all over their neighborhood, “saying my husband, Stephen, is a Nazi, is a war criminal and had our home address,” Katie Miller said. The Millers lived just south of Washington, D.C., in Arlington, Virginia.
“They spread it all over our neighborhood and have continued to do so, not only at my children’s parks, but around town,” she said in September.
She added that while the people who doxxed her and her husband are not assassins, “they are inciting the same violence we saw take out our friend Charlie Kirk last week.”
Katie and Stephen Miller have three children under 5 years old.