Wisconsin Man Gets 7 Years for Arson at Congressman’s Office Over TikTok

MADISON, Wis. — A 20-year-old Wisconsin man received a seven-year prison sentence Thursday for attempting to burn down a Republican congressman’s office because he opposed the lawmaker’s support for TikTok divestiture legislation.

Fond du Lac County Circuit Judge Tricia Walker also ordered Caiden Stachowicz of Menasha to serve seven years of extended supervision following his prison term, according to court documents.

Stachowicz entered a no contest plea in November to arson charges. In return for his plea, which carries the same weight as a guilty verdict during sentencing without admitting wrongdoing, prosecutors dismissed burglary and property damage charges.

Defense attorney Timothy Hogan did not respond to requests for comment.

Court documents reveal that a police officer arrived at the scene of a fire outside Republican U.S. Rep. Glenn Grothman’s Fond du Lac office around 1 a.m. on January 19, 2025, and found Stachowicz in the vicinity. The office is located approximately 55 miles northwest of Milwaukee.

Stachowicz admitted to the officer that he ignited the fire due to his dislike of Grothman, the complaint states. His original plan involved breaking into the building to start the fire indoors, but after failing to shatter a window, he doused an electrical box behind the structure and the front entrance area with gasoline before lighting it with a match and observing the flames, according to court filings.

The defendant explained his motivation by saying he wanted to destroy the office because the federal government was eliminating TikTok in violation of his constitutional freedoms and peaceful solutions were no longer viable, the complaint indicates. He noted that Grothman supported the ban but emphasized he had no intention of harming the congressman or anyone else.

In April 2024, Grothman cast his vote for legislation mandating that ByteDance, TikTok’s China-based parent company, divest its American operations. The original compliance deadline was January 19, 2025, though President Donald Trump has extended the timeline through several executive orders. TikTok completed arrangements two months ago to establish an American version of the video-sharing platform, which Trump has endorsed.

Representatives from Grothman’s congressional office have not responded to requests for comment.