City Of Kansas City Deletes Disgusting Harrison Butker Tweet, Missouri AG Threatens Legal Action

Harrison Butker was doxxed Wednesday night in a now-deleted tweet.

The Kansas City Chiefs kicker has been taking fire from the outrage mob after a commencement speech at the conservative Christian university Benedictine College in Atchison, Kansas.

The problem? Butker pushed a conservative pro-family message, encouraged young woman to pursue the goal of building a great family, praised his wife as an amazing women and took shots at Joe Biden.

For that, the mob is coming for him, and things hit a breaking point Wednesday night.

Harrison Butker doxxed in deleted tweet.

The official X account for the city of Kansas City tweeted information about the city Butker lives in Wednesday night. The tweet was ultimately deleted and an apology was issued.

Unfortunately for Butker, screenshots of the tweet are all over X. We will not be sharing the information here as I have no interest in helping people find out where anyone lives.

Kansas City mayor Quinton Lucas also released a statement after the tweet was deleted. He tweeted his followers, "A message appeared earlier this evening from a City public account. The message was clearly inappropriate for a public account. The City has correctly apologized for the error, will review account access, and ensure nothing like it is shared in the future from public channels."

Missouri attorney general Andrew Bailey also released a statement on X Thursday afternoon vowing to take legal action.

"I will enforce the Missouri Human Rights Act to ensure Missourians are not targeted for their free exercise of religion. Stay tuned," Bailey tweeted, in part.

This entire situation is beyond disgusting. It's now become legitimately dangerous. All it takes is for one crazy person to start hunting for Butker's location, and all bets are off.

It's completely unacceptable to tweet someone's living location from an official city account. I'm sure who did it will be punished severely, and Butker should sue the city if anything happens.

People have to be held responsible for when their conduct endangers others.

Let me know your thoughts at David.Hookstead@outkick.com, and keep checking back to OutKick for the latest updates as we have them.

Written by
David Hookstead is a reporter for OutKick covering a variety of topics with a focus on football and culture. He also hosts of the podcast American Joyride that is accessible on Outkick where he interviews American heroes and outlines their unique stories. Before joining OutKick, Hookstead worked for the Daily Caller for seven years covering similar topics. Hookstead is a graduate of the University of Wisconsin.