Democratic Party Member Arrested After Confrontation at Government Facility

A Democratic candidate seeking to represent Hawaii’s 2nd Congressional District was arrested Friday after authorities responded to an incident at a government facility in Wailuku, according to local reports and court filings.

Kirill Basin, 40, was taken into custody several hours after authorities said he allegedly threatened two Maui County employees during a confrontation at the county building. Officials later arrested him at his residence on a charge of first-degree terroristic threatening.

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The arrest came one day after Basin shared claims on social media regarding a lawsuit he filed against law enforcement officers. In the post, he alleged that he had been mistreated during a previous encounter with police. Court records indicate Basin filed the complaint himself and is not currently represented by an attorney.

According to local reports, concerns about Basin’s behavior had been growing in the days leading up to Friday’s incident. Earlier in the week, police reportedly escorted him from a public town hall meeting in South Maui following a dispute involving local government officials and staff members.

Court documents filed Friday also detail allegations from Jared Agtunong, an executive assistant to a Maui County council member. In a petition seeking a temporary restraining order, Agtunong alleged that Basin sent a series of troubling text messages and voicemails after a previous encounter.

Agtunong stated that he received messages that he interpreted as threatening and said he later sought legal protection through the courts. A judge reportedly approved the temporary restraining order request shortly after it was filed.

Records also show that Basin was previously arrested on a disorderly conduct charge in May, although limited information about that case has been publicly released.

The incident in Hawaii comes amid several recent cases involving political candidates facing legal scrutiny over alleged threats against public officials. Authorities at both the state and federal levels have emphasized that threats directed at government employees and elected leaders are taken seriously regardless of political affiliation.

In a separate case earlier this month, federal authorities in Pennsylvania arrested Raymond Chandler, a Democratic candidate for the U.S. Senate, following allegations that he left threatening voicemails directed at President Donald Trump and a member of Congress. The arrest involved both the FBI and the U.S. Secret Service.

According to federal court filings, investigators alleged that Chandler made multiple threatening statements in messages left for congressional offices. Authorities said the voicemails prompted concerns among staff members and led to a federal investigation. Chandler had recently announced plans to challenge Senator John Fetterman in Pennsylvania’s 2028 Senate race.

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