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Author Topic: 1/6 Insurrection Investigation  (Read 114611 times)

Offline Rick Plant

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Re: 1/6 Insurrection Investigation
« Reply #328 on: March 05, 2022, 12:11:52 PM »
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Infamous white nationalist's mom sues to block January 6 committee from obtaining his phone records



On Friday, POLITICO's Kyle Cheney reported that the mother of infamous white supremacist live streamer Anthime Gionet, a.k.a. "Baked Alaska," is suing to block a subpoena from the House January 6 Committee seeking for Verizon to turn over his phone records.

Susanne Gionet, who owns the phone plan that her son uses, accuses the committee in her suit of "lack[ing] the lawful authority to demand such information it seeks to obtain" and issuing the subpoena to Verizon "without legal authority in violation of the Constitution of the United States."

The Jan. 6 select committee has subpoenaed Verizon for the phone records of Anthime Gionet — also known as BAKED ALASKA — the right-wing commentator who was charged with misdemeanors for breaching the Capitol.

Gionet’s mother, the account holder, is issuing to block the panel.






Baked Alaska, who also took part in the 2017 "Unite the Right" neo-Nazi rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, faces charges of disorderly conduct and entering a restricted building for his role in the January 6 attack — charges bolstered by the live stream he shot of himself staging the attack. He has also separately been arrested for allegedly vandalizing a Hanukkah display at the Arizona State Capitol a few weeks prior to January 6.

This is part of a broader strategy by the committee to obtain phone records from participants in the riots and allies of former President Donald Trump, which do not include the content of their calls but can reveal who they called and when. This information could help the committee determine whether any of the rioters were in contact with government officials.

Some other people whose records could be caught up in these subpoenas have sued, including far-right conspiracy theorist webcaster Alex Jones.

https://twitter.com/kyledcheney/status/1499889536905756678

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Re: 1/6 Insurrection Investigation
« Reply #328 on: March 05, 2022, 12:11:52 PM »


Offline Rick Plant

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Re: 1/6 Insurrection Investigation
« Reply #329 on: March 05, 2022, 12:18:45 PM »
MAGA rioter clad in 'CNN: FAKE NEWS' hat gets 51 months in jail for attacking cops with a pipe on Jan. 6



A 68-year-old man sporting a hat that read “CNN: FAKE NEWS” -- and who attacked multiple officers at the U.S. Capitol with a pipe -- received one of the longest sentences handed down to date in connection with the January 6 riot.

Duke Edward Wilson, of Nampa Idaho, was sentenced Friday to 51 months in prison followed by 36 months of supervised probation and a fine of $2,000 by Judge Royce C. Lamberth. Wilson had pleaded guilty last September to assaulting, resisting or impeding officers and obstructing an official proceeding, both felonies.

“Lamberth said the 51-month sentence — the maximum allowed under federal sentencing guidelines — was necessary because the insurrection was 'a horrible day for our country,'" the Idaho Press reported. “It's a message that the court has to send, that our country cannot deal with that.”

The Press also reports:

“U.S. Capitol Police Sgt. Aquilino Gonell told the judge during the hearing that he is still suffering from the injuries he suffered after Wilson's attack, underwent surgeries to fuse a bone in his foot and to repair his shoulder and may need additional shoulder surgeries.

“Prosecutors said Wilson charged a set of doors in the tunnel and prevented officers from closing them, and then tried to rain blows on the officers using a thin PVC pipe that he had apparently found on the ground. Gonell tried to block the pipe from hitting a fellow officer who had no helmet, he said.

“Both my hands were bleeding at that time from blocking,” Gonell said. “He insisted on continuing to fight me to prevent us from closing that door, that would enable him and his fellow insurrectionists to advance in the tunnel and the Capitol as members of Congress and the Senate were being evacuated from the very same route.”

“I remember vividly what happened that day to me, to him,” Gonell said. “More than one year later I am still not able to put on my police uniform due to those injuries because of what he did to me and my fellow officers.”

You can read the FBI criminal complaint against Wilson here:

https://www.rawstory.com/capitol-rioter-sentence-2656845952/

Offline Rick Plant

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Re: 1/6 Insurrection Investigation
« Reply #330 on: March 07, 2022, 04:54:55 AM »
Jan. 6 committee makes the case that Trump was involved in 'criminal' activity
https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/congress/jan-6-committee-makes-case-trump-was-involved-criminal-activity-rcna18814

Judge rejects Eastman effort to slow down Jan. 6 committee
"Dr. Eastman’s liberty is not at issue—only his emails," Judge David Carter rules.

https://www.politico.com/news/2022/03/04/eastman-delay-jan-6-committee-emails-00014320


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Re: 1/6 Insurrection Investigation
« Reply #330 on: March 07, 2022, 04:54:55 AM »


Offline Rick Plant

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Re: 1/6 Insurrection Investigation
« Reply #331 on: March 09, 2022, 12:20:42 AM »
Indictment of Proud Boys leader hints at coordination with other insurrection actors



With the indictment of Enrique Tarrio, the government has laid out the case that the Proud Boys utilized a command structure to mobilize members to take part in the Jan. 6 assault on the US Capitol, while dropping tantalizing hints about connections between the nationalist street brawling group and other potential actors in the conspiracy to prevent Congress’ certification of Joe Biden’s election as president of the United States.

The new superseding indictment -- which also includes defendants Joe Biggs, Ethan Nordean, Charles Donohoe, Zach Rehl and Dominic Pezzola — already charged in two previous indictments — notes that on Dec. 19, 2020, President Trump announced a protest to coincide with Congress’ certification of the electoral college vote via tweet: “Big protest in DC on January 6th. Be there, will be wild!”

The following day, according to the indictment, Tarrio created a new chapter called “Ministry of Self Defense,” or MOSD, which he described as a “national rally planning” chapter that would include only “hand selected” members. On the same day, Tarrio allegedly created an encrypted message group called “MOSD Leaders Group,” which included Biggs, Nordean, Rehl, Donohoe and three other unidentified members. Pezzola was added to a separate MOSD Members Group by an unindicted conspirator identified as “Person-1,” according to the government.

“Person-1” is described in the indictment as suffering a “knife wound” during an altercation in Washington, DC on Dec. 12. Those circumstances are consistent with Jeremy Bertino, a Proud Boy who marketed the “RWDS” patch — short for “Right Wing Death Squads” — and was frequently at Tarrio’s side, including during a January 2020 Second Amendment rally in Richmond, Va. and at a Million MAGA March in DC on Nov. 14, 2020.

Pointing towards coordination between Tarrio and other actors in the attempted insurrection, the indictment alleges that Tarrio communicated “with an individual whose identity is known to the grand jury” on Dec. 30 and Dec. 31. According to the indictment, the unidentified individual sent a nine-page document entitled “1776 Returns” to Tarrio that “set forth a plan to occupy a few ‘crucial buildings’ in Washington, DC on January 6, including House and Senate office buildings around the Capitol, with as ‘many people as possible’ to ‘show our politicians We the People are in charge.’”

The indictment quotes the sender of the document as saying, “The revolution is more important than anything.”

Tarrio’s response, quoted in the indictment suggests he shared the same sentiment: “That’s what every waking moment consists of…. I’m not playing games.”

The indictment alleges that Proud Boys leaders settled on a plan of specifically targeting the US Capitol as early as Jan. 3, quoting an unindicted conspirator identified only as “Person-3.”

“I mean the main operating theater should be out in front of the house of representatives,” the unidentified Proud Boys leader allegedly said in a voice note posted to the MOSD Leaders Group chat. “It should be out in front of the Capitol building. That’s where the vote is taking place and all of the objections. So, we can ignore the rest of these stages and all that s**t and plan the operations based around the front entrance to the Capitol building.”

Tarrio allegedly posted a voice note on Jan. 4, saying, “I didn’t hear this voice note until now, you want to storm the Capitol.”

Tarrio, who was then the national chairman of the Proud Boys, was arrested in Washington DC the same day on charges related to the Proud Boys’ theft of a “Black Lives Matter” flag from a Black church that they burned on Dec. 12, 2020. As a condition of pre-trial release, Tarrio was banned from DC and prevented from being at the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021.

Within one hour of Tarrio’s arrest, according to the indictment, Donohoe created a new group on the encrypted messaging app called “New MOSD Leaders Group.” A second group called “New MOSD Members Group” including 90 members was also reportedly created.

According to the government, at 7:15 p.m. on Jan. 4, Donohoe posted a message in the New MOSD Members Group stating, “Hey have been instructed and listen to me real good! There is no planning of any sorts. I need to be put into whatever new thing was created. Everything is compromised and we can be looking at Gang charges.”

Subsequently, according to the government, Donohoe wrote in the chat: “Stop everything immediately,” and then, “This comes from the top.”

The indictment signals that the government will argue that the Proud Boys played a critical role in the assault on the Capitol by highlighting members’ roles at critical points in the breach.

Shortly after 10 a.m. on Jan. 6, prior to Trump’s speech at the Ellipse, Nordean and Biggs led a large group of Proud Boys from the Washington Monument to the Capitol. Sometime around noon, the government alleges that Donohoe reported in a separate encrypted group chat that the group had grown to 200-300 Proud Boys. At about 12:53 p.m., Nordean, Biggs and Rehl led the group to the First Street pedestrian entrance near the Peace Monument.

The indictment notes a brief encounter between Biggs and Ryan Samsel, who has been separately charged with forcible assault on a federal agent and was the first person to walk up to a line of Capitol police officers and physically confront them.

Without naming Samsel, the new indictment against Proud Boys leadership notes: “Seconds before 12:53 p.m., Biggs was approached by an individual whose identity is known to the grand jury. The individual put one arm around Biggs’s shoulder and spoke to him. Approximately one minute later, this individual crossed the barrier that restricted access to the Capitol grounds. This was the first barrier protecting the Capitol grounds to be breached on January 6, 2021, and the point of entry for Nordean, Biggs, Rehl, Donohoe, and Pezzola.”

In another crucial move for the mob’s advance on the Capitol, Pezzola allegedly stole a riot shield from a Capitol police officer that he and Donohoe took turns carrying. The indictment notes that at “approximately 2:13 p.m., Pezzola used the riot shield he had taken from a Capitol police officer to break a window of the Capitol. The first members of the mob entered the Capitol through this broken window.”

While Tarrio was not present at the Capitol, the indictment indicates he was closely monitoring events.

“Don’t f***ing leave,” Tarrio wrote in a social media post at 2:38 p.m., according to the government.

Another social media post at 2:57 p.m. suggests that Tarrio did not realize that the government building breached by the Proud Boys and other rioters was the US Capitol. According to the government, Tarrio wrote, “1776,” and then, “Revolutionaries are now at the Rayburn building,” apparently referencing the “1776 Returns” plan he received on Dec. 30.

The Select Committee to Investigate the January 6th Attack on the United States Capitol, which is conducting a separate investigation from the FBI, has looked into potential links between the Proud Boys and other actors like Alex Jones, the conspiracy theorist who hosts InfoWars.

Following a report that Jones told congressional investigators that he encountered the Proud Boys at a Hooters restaurant following a rally at the Georgia State Capitol in November 2020, Bertino posted a photo on his Telegram channel that shows Jones seated next to Tarrio. Owen Shroyer and Samuel Montoya, a host and contributor respectively at InfoWars, have been charged in connection with the Jan. 6 breach, but Jones has not been charged to date.



Prosecutors have also acknowledged they are aware of communication between the Proud Boys and the Oath Keepers, a far-right militia group that recruits military veterans and retired law enforcement, prior to Jan. 6.

Court documents filed by the government last March show that Kelly Meggs, the state lead for the Florida Oath Keepers chapter, bragged on Dec. 19, 2020: “Well we are ready for the rioters, this week I organized an alliance between Oath Keepers, Florida 3%ers, and Proud Boys. We have all decided to work together and shut this s**t down.”

In another message on Dec. 22, Meggs reported to his fellow Oath Keepers: “Contact with PB and they always have a big group. Force multiplier.” In another message, he wrote: “I figure we could splinter off the main group of PB and come up behind them. F***ing crush them for good.”

The filings do not reveal the name of the Proud Boys leader who communicated with Meggs, but both Tarrio and Biggs lived in Florida at the time.

Even more significant, the new indictment released today cites a meeting between the leaders of the two organizations on the eve of the attempted insurrection.

The indictment notes that after being released from jail on Jan. 5, Tarrio did not immediately comply with the order to leave DC.

“After being turned away from the Phoenix Park Hotel, Tarrio traveled to a nearby underground parking garage, where he met with Elmer Stewart Rhodes III, the founder and leader of the Oath Keepers, and other individuals known and unknown to the grand jury, for approximately 30 minutes. During the encounter, a participant referenced the Capitol.”

https://www.rawstory.com/enrique-tarrio-indictment/

Offline Rick Plant

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Re: 1/6 Insurrection Investigation
« Reply #332 on: March 09, 2022, 12:33:38 AM »
Indicted Oath Keepers leader Stewart Rhodes whines Trump 'ghosted' his supporters on Jan. 6



One of the most high-profile individuals charged in connection with the deadly Jan. 6 insurrection at the U.S. Capitol appears to be having recriminations about aligning himself with then-President Donald Trump.

Stewart Rhodes, founder and leader of the far right group Oath Keepers, told The Intercept in a just published interview that he is disappointed that Trump didn't follow through on his pledge that January morning to join "Stop the Steal" supporters in their march to Capitol Hill to try to overturn the results of the 2020 presidential election.

Rhodes spoke of what he sees as Trump’s betrayal with reporter Mike Giglio: “On January 6, he told all his followers, you know, now we are going to march on the Capitol, and I’ll be with you. And he just ghosted. Didn’t show up at his own party.” Trump, he continued, has left his supporters to face the investigation on their own, offering no financial or legal support to the people it targeted: “It’s like we don’t exist.” To Trump and the other big players in the “Stop the Steal” movement, he said, the Oath Keepers were “nothing. Cannon fodder.”

The group's leader expressed a sense of disillusionment with Trump, whom the militant crowd had treated as a champion and standard-bearer. Seventeen people with alleged links to the Oath Keepers have been arrested. Some of them cannot afford defense attorneys and are being represented by public defenders.

Meanwhile the former president plays golf multiple times per week in Florida and jets off to give speeches and fundraising for himself, but not for his supporters. Trump, Rhodes lamented in the interview, had failed to even issue pardons for January 6 suspects on his way out of office.

Rhodes was arrested Jan. 13 after being charged with seditious conspiracy for allegedly guiding a months-long effort to use political violence to prevent the swearing-in of President Biden. He has been ordered held without bail until trial.

https://theintercept.com/2022/03/08/oath-keepers-january-6-stewart-rhodes-trump/


Capitol rioter who carried a gun was 'ecstatic about what he did': prosecutors



Prosecutors rested their case against the first Capitol riot defendant to go to trial this Monday after telling jurors that rioter Guy Reffitt was "ecstatic about what he did" when he tried to storm the Capitol while armed on Jan. 6., NBC News reports.

Reffitt, who was allegedly carrying a handgun that day, pushed to the front of the mob and confronted officers, according to Assistant U.S. Attorney Risa Berkower. "Every time he advanced, the crowd advanced," Berkower said. "You saw him lead the crowd."

“He was ecstatic about what he did, about what the mob did,” Berkower said. “Back home in Texas, he thought he has gotten away with it.”

The government provided evidence of Reffitt saying that he was armed when he attempted to enter the Capitol building. As NBC News points out, Reffitt was a member of the Texas Three Percenters militia, and posted numerous messages about the Capitol riot both before and after Jan. 6.

He also recorded himself saying he planned to drag Nancy Pelosi out of the Capitol by her heels.

"His friend, testifying under an immunity agreement, testified that they were both armed on Jan. 6. And afterwards, in a Zoom meeting Reffitt recorded, Reffitt admitted that he had his '.40' on his side when he attempted to storm the building," NBC News reports. "He also bragged about his exploits during discussions with his family, which were recorded by his son."

The charges Reffitt faces include transporting a rifle and semi-automatic handgun intended to be used in furtherance of a civil disorder, obstruction of an official proceeding, and entering and remaining on restricted grounds with a deadly or dangerous weapon.

Read the full report at NBC News:

https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/justice-department/prosecutors-tells-jurors-ecstatic-jan-6-defendant-bragged-carrying-gun-rcna18967

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Re: 1/6 Insurrection Investigation
« Reply #332 on: March 09, 2022, 12:33:38 AM »


Offline Rick Plant

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Re: 1/6 Insurrection Investigation
« Reply #333 on: March 09, 2022, 12:47:46 PM »
Follow the money: Trump's $200 million fundraising arm now a target of riot committee



The House Select Committee to Investigate the Jan. 6 Attack on the U.S. Capitol is extensively following the money, The Washington Post reported Tuesday.

"The House Jan. 6 committee has waged high-profile legal battles with Donald Trump and his closest allies as it tries to uncover every detail of what happened that day and determine what culpability the former president may have for the violent attack on the Capitol," The Post reported. "But it has also been focused on another part of its inquiry that panel members said is of equal importance to the success of the investigation — tracing every dollar that was raised and spent on false claims that the election was stolen."

The committee's "green team" specializing in following the money has successfully convinced some former campaign staffers to cooperate.

"Investigators in recent months have increased their focus on the vast digital fundraising efforts around overturning the election, trying to pinpoint if the Trump campaign and allied Republicans were engaged in a coordinated effort to raise money on fraudulent and misleading appeals, according to people involved in the probe. A number of individuals from the Trump campaign, the RNC and digital firms involved with post-election fundraising practices have been cooperating with the green team," the newspaper reported. "In the months after Trump’s election loss, the Trump campaign, the RNC, Trump Make America Great Again Committee and Save America PAC raised more than $200 million through a joint fundraising committee."

Former Trump campaign manager Brad Parscale has reportedly been questioned by the "green team."

"The committee is also asking witnesses whether there was ever a plan to spend the money on election matters, or if it was simply a scheme to raise money with lies and dubious claims, two people with knowledge of the questioning said. For instance, raising money to support an election defense fund — and then directing that money to other things, or not spending it — raises ethical and legal questions, according to legal experts and campaign finance groups," the newspaper reported.

Read the full report:

https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2022/03/08/jan-6-fundraising-trump/


Brad Parscale questioned by Jan. 6 Committee about Trump's money trail



The House Select Committee to Investigate the Jan. 6 Attack on the U.S. Capitol has assembled a specialized "green team" to follow the money behind the rallies that proceeded the riots, The Washington Post reported Tuesday.

"The House Jan. 6 committee has waged high-profile legal battles with Donald Trump and his closest allies as it tries to uncover every detail of what happened that day and determine what culpability the former president may have for the violent attack on the Capitol," the newspaper reported. "But it has also been focused on another part of its inquiry that panel members said is of equal importance to the success of the investigation — tracing every dollar that was raised and spent on false claims that the election was stolen."

The newspaper reported that some members of Trump's campaign are cooperating with investigators.

"A number of individuals from the Trump campaign, the RNC and digital firms involved with post-election fundraising practices have been cooperating with the green team. The committee recently asked questions of Gary Coby, the Trump campaign’s top digital fundraising guru, and has interviewed both campaign and RNC staff, according to multiple people familiar with the matter. They have also questioned Brad Parscale, the former Trump campaign manager, and interviewed people who worked for him," the newspaper reported.

In December, Parscale complained to The Daily Beast that the committee was trying to get him to flip on Trump.

"The green team is led by Amanda Wick, a former federal prosecutor and official at the Treasury and Justice departments, and involves a number of select committee aides who have experience in analyzing bank records, Federal Election Commission data, understanding cryptocurrency and piecing together receipts of financial crimes, such as fraud," the newspaper reported.

@wpjenna Committee investigators ... even dialed up the owners of a portable-toilet company to find out who paid them to put toilets on the Ellipse the day of the insurrection." @jdawsey1 @JaxAlemany @thamburger on the effort to trace every dollar:

https://twitter.com/wpjenna/status/1501313196128411654

https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2022/03/08/jan-6-fundraising-trump/

Offline Rick Plant

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Re: 1/6 Insurrection Investigation
« Reply #334 on: March 10, 2022, 12:48:43 AM »
Republicans' lies about Jan. 6 are being dismantled before their very eyes



The rioters Donald Trump sicced on the Capitol were still tearing the place apart on January 6, 2021, when the folks at Fox News began their effort to minimize the seriousness of the insurrection. Behind the scenes, hosts like Laura Ingraham and Sean Hannity were frantically texting the White House, begging Trump to call his people back, but on-air, they were vigorously defending the insurrectionists.

"It's not like it's a siege," Fox host Bret Baier said while thousands of Trump supporters literally overran cops, broke windows, and chased terrified members of Congress through the hallways. Various Fox News personalities would go on to claim that Trump's supporters were only there to "peacefully protest" and pinned the blame for the violence on "antifa" infiltrators.

In the months after the insurrection, the Republican deflection and minimization only escalated.

Rep. Andrew Clyde of Georgia claimed it was "a normal tourist visit." Tucker Carlson of Fox News insisted, "It was not an insurrection." Ingraham argued, "one of the big lies that this was a coordinated insurrection." Fox Business host Maria Bartiromo called it a "peaceful protest." Sen. Ron Johnson of Wisconsin said it "didn't seem like an armed insurrection." When Capitol law enforcement and Democratic Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of New York spoke of the violence they witnessed and fear they felt that day, Fox News pundits accused them of lying. When faced with images of rioters assaulting police and trying to attack members of Congress, the pivot was to blame the left, usually by claiming the violence was committed by "antifa" or to accuse the FBI of orchestrating it as a false flag.

To say these lies are relentless is to understate the case. The lies were also effective, as the majority of Republicans now endorse false claims that the insurrection was either "peaceful" or "antifa" and sometimes, contradicting themselves, they claim both at once.

But this week illustrated how the Department of Justice has been, through increasingly aggressive prosecution of the insurrectionists and their co-conspirators, building up a formidable wall of evidence to disprove all of the GOP lies about January 6.

On Tuesday, the DOJ had two major victories in the war to tell the truth about what happened after Trump sent thousands of his goons to storm the Capitol. First, Guy Reffitt, a Texas "militia" member who was turned in by his own son, was found guilty on all five felony charges he faced for his part in the insurrection. This was the first jury trial for an insurrectionist, and a good sign that future such prosecutions won't go well for the rioters. Then the DOJ revealed that it had formally charged Enrique Tarrio, the then-leader of the neo-fascist Proud Boys, for conspiracy for his role in trying to stop the certification of Joe Biden's presidential election.

It's always exciting to see people who tried to overthrow democracy face punishment, but these court proceedings are consequential outside of the feelings of satisfaction they provide.

Both the conviction and the new charges contribute heavily to the public record that demonstrates, beyond any shadow of a doubt, that Republicans are lying when they minimize the events of January 6. It was, contrary to what Trump apologists would have you believe, a violent, armed, and organized insurrection. And yes, it was Trump supporters who did it — not "antifa" or the FBI.

Unlike the various rioters who pled down to trespassing and other minor charges, Reffitt was convicted of some very serious crimes: two weapons charges related to the gun he brought to the Capitol, a charge of obstructing an official proceeding, and obstruction of justice, along with the trespassing charge. Similarly, Tarrio's indictment on conspiracy charges is not a small matter. Tarrio wasn't even at the Capitol that day, as he was busy dealing with charges due to other crimes he committed in the run-up to the insurrection. But he was the ringleader of the part the Proud Boys played in the riot, and for that, he's being hit with conspiracy charges. This follows a similar indictment of Stewart Rhodes, the leader of the Oath Keepers, who was charged in January with seditious conspiracy. Like Tarrio, Rhodes stayed out of the actual Capitol building that day, but there's a mountain of evidence that he was coordinating his followers that did participate in the attack.

Taken together, all this evidence paints a very clear picture of the insurrection as an organized conspiracy, one that was orchestrated by people who were eager and ready to use violence to steal the election for Trump. The only reason it wasn't worse is because there were enough Capitol police who were brave and competent and were able to get members of Congress to safety before the rioters could get to them. Indeed, the video footage of a Capitol officer shooting insurrectionist Ashli Babbitt is a chilling reminder of how close the rioters got to actually hurting or killing elected representatives and their staff. If he hadn't shot her and scared the crowd into backing off, they absolutely would have run down the fleeing congressional members.

Crucially, as the Washington Post reported last week, Trump's close friend and longtime unofficial aide Roger Stone was in frequent touch with both Rhodes and Tarrio in the lead-up to the insurrection. Stone erased some of these communications before the FBI got a hold of his phone, as well. That suggests that those charged with conspiracy are only one layer, in the grotesque Trump pyramid of lackeys, away from Trump himself.

How much will that matter in the end? So far, there's been very little evidence that Attorney General Merrick Garland is interested in prosecuting Trump for inciting the insurrection, much less for any potential role Trump had in organizing it. It's reached the point where members of the House committee to investigate January 6 routinely go on cable news and practically beg Garland to go after Trump. If Garland really is refusing to prosecute Trump for fear that it will look "political," then he must reconsider.

It's not just a matter of protecting democracy from the next Trump coup. It's also a matter of professional pride. If Trump is able to successfully steal the White House in 2024, which he is openly plotting to do, all of these carefully pieced together cases against the January 6 conspiracists will go up in smoke, as Trump hands out pardons like candy. To show respect for all the hard work DOJ employees put into putting these people in prison, Garland needs to make sure that they stay there.

That said, it is helpful to have a public record built up that definitively shows that the GOP and Fox News claims to minimize January 6 are all lies. It won't convince the diehard Trump supporters, of course. They're so well-practiced at endorsing lies that there's no such thing as evidence definitive enough to get them to back down. But polling and focus group data show there's a massive mushy middle of Americans who don't approve of January 6, but also have been impacted by right-wing propaganda so they don't understand how coordinated, purposeful, and violent the insurrection actually was. If and when the January 6 committee gets around to holding public hearings about the insurrection, we can expect a massive blitz of the same lies that both Republicans and right-wing media have been telling for months. These court documents offer a useful counterbalance and will help shame the mainstream media into not running with "both sides say, who can tell?" style coverage of the claims being made.

Still, if the DOJ wants these charges to stick, they would be wise to prosecute Trump. Otherwise, he has a very good chance of installing himself as president and issuing the mass pardons he has already promised. If only to save their own work product, the DOJ needs to seriously consider charging Trump for some of his many, many crimes. A public record is nice. Actual consequences for trying to overthrow democracy are better.

https://www.rawstory.com/republicans-lies-about-jan-6-are-being-dismantled-before-their-very-eyes/

Offline Rick Plant

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Re: 1/6 Insurrection Investigation
« Reply #335 on: March 10, 2022, 10:38:14 AM »
Jan. 6 committee reveals why it subpoenaed RNC fundraising records



The House Select Committee to Investigate the January 6th Attack on the U.S. Capitol on Wednesday shed new light as to why it subpoenaed Salesforce over fundraising records for the Republican National Committee.

"The Select Committee is seeking information from Salesforce regarding whether and how the Trump campaign used Salesforce’s platform to disseminate false statements about the 2020 election in the weeks leading up to the January 6th attack. Accordingly, the Select Committee seeks documents and a deposition regarding these and other matters that are within the scope of the Select Committee’s inquiry," select committee chairman Bennie Thompson (D-MS) said in a Feb. 23 subpoena.

The RNC has filed a lawsuit to block the select committee from obtaining the Salesforce records.

The select committee addressed the information in a thread posted to Twitter on Wednesday evening.

"Between Election Day 2020 and January 6th, the RNC and the Trump campaign solicited donations by pushing false claims that the election was tainted by widespread fraud. These emails encouraged supporters to put pressure on Congress to keep President Trump in power," the committee said. "The Select Committee issued a subpoena to an email fundraising vendor in order to help investigators understand the impact of false, inflammatory messages in the weeks before January 6th, the flow of funds, & whether contributions were actually directed to the purpose indicated."

On Tuesday, The Washington Post reported the committee has created a "green team" to follow the money.

"Investigators in recent months have increased their focus on the vast digital fundraising efforts around overturning the election, trying to pinpoint if the Trump campaign and allied Republicans were engaged in a coordinated effort to raise money on fraudulent and misleading appeals, according to people involved in the probe. A number of individuals from the Trump campaign, the RNC and digital firms involved with post-election fundraising practices have been cooperating with the green team," the newspaper reported. "In the months after Trump’s election loss, the Trump campaign, the RNC, Trump Make America Great Again Committee and Save America PAC raised more than $200 million through a joint fundraising committee."

@January6thCmte Between Election Day 2020 and January 6th, the RNC and the Trump campaign solicited donations by pushing false claims that the election was tainted by widespread fraud.

These emails encouraged supporters to put pressure on Congress to keep President Trump in power.

The Select Committee issued a subpoena to an email fundraising vendor in order to help investigators understand the impact of false, inflammatory messages in the weeks before January 6th, the flow of funds, & whether contributions were actually directed to the purpose indicated.


https://twitter.com/January6thCmte/status/1501736199781765123

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Re: 1/6 Insurrection Investigation
« Reply #335 on: March 10, 2022, 10:38:14 AM »