31-01-2021, 05:17 PM
Klete Keller
Obstructing law enforcement engaged in official duties incident to civil disorder; Knowingly entering or remaining in any restricted building or grounds without lawful authority; violent entry and disorderly conduct on Capitol grounds.
What happened
Olympic gold-medal swimmer Klete Keller was arrested after being identified in video from the Capitol riot. At 6-foot-6, Keller is a five-time Olympic medalist and three-time Olympian. His height helped the FBI identify him after SwimSwam published a story confirming Keller was in footage shot by TownHall. Keller wore a jacket with a U.S. Olympic patch in the video.
Keller had been listed as a real estate agent at Hoff & Leigh in Colorado, which issued a statement the day before Keller's arrest that he had resigned.
The U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Committee responded to reports of Keller's presence at the Capitol before his arrest without naming him. CEO Sarah Hirshland said, "I strongly condemn the actions of the rioters at the U.S. Capitol. They do not represent the values of the United States of America or of Team USA."
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Robert Keith Packer
Knowingly entering or remaining in any restricted building or grounds without lawful authority and violent entry or disorderly conduct on Capitol grounds.
What happened
The "Camp Auschwitz" shirt Robert K. Packer was photographed wearing at the Capitol riots ultimately helped lead to his identification and arrest. In an affidavit accompanying an arrest warrant, the FBI noted they received a tip because someone in the community recognized Packer and had seen him wearing the shirt in the past.
The complaint noted the shirt, with a human skull and the phrase "Work brings freedom" appears to be a symbol of Nazi hate ideology.
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Kevin J. Lyons
Knowingly entering or remaining in any restricted building or grounds without lawful authority; Violent entry and disorderly conduct on Capitol grounds
What happened
Lyons posted a photo of a map to his Instagram on Jan. 5, saying: "I refuse to tell my children that I sat back and did nothing. I'm heading to DC to STOP THE STEAL!! #MAGA #KAG."
The arrest complaint states that he later posted a photo from the Capitol of a sign over the door to House Speaker Nancy Pelosi's office with a comment saying "WHOS HOUSE?!?!? OUR HOUSE!!"
Two days later, two FBI agents who interviewed Lyons at his home reported that he was evasive about whether he entered the Capitol, telling them he dreamed it and that in the dream, "people really didn't have much choice of where they were going because of the mob." When the agents asked to see his phone, he showed the officers the photo he posted on Instagram and agreed to upload two videos he recorded inside the Capitol to YouTube and email them the link. He eventually told the agents he had walked up the Capitol stairs and entered through its rear doors. He said he went into Pelosi's office where an armed police officer told him to get out.
Jenny Cudd
Restricted building or grounds; Violent entry or disorderly conduct
What happened
A former candidate for mayor in Midland, Texas, Jenny Cudd, wearing a Trump flag as a cape, posted a video saying: “We did break down Nancy Pelosi’s office door.”
“I’m proud of everything I was a part of today,” the florist shop owner stated in another video clip. “The government serves at the consent of the governed. Well, the governed are pissed off.”
The Midland Reporter Telegram reported that Cudd said she didn't do anything unlawful. The newspaper also reported Cudd said: “When (Vice President) Pence betrayed us is when we decided to storm the Capitol.”
According to court records, the FBI tracked Cudd and Eliel Rosa, whom she was later arrested with, as they walked through the Capitol rotunda on the day of the riot.
Eliel Rosa
Restricted building or grounds; Violent entry or disorderly conduct
What happened
Rosa was arrested with Jenny Cudd, who was photographed with him in the Capitol rotunda. Cudd, a former mayoral candidate in Midland, Texas, appeared in Facebook videos and in photos admitting to entering the Capitol. In a Facebook video, she said, "We did break down the Nancy Pelosi’s office door."
The FBI tracked Rosa and Cudd's movements in the rotunda using surveillance footage. In an interview with the FBI two days after the riot, Rosa admitted he and Cudd entered the Capitol.
Albert Ciarpelli
Knowingly entering or remaining in any restricted building or grounds without lawful authority; Violent entry and disorderly conduct on Capitol grounds
What happened
Albert Ciarpelli drove from Syracuse to Washington, D.C. to attend the rally. After the rally he joined the crowd walking toward the Capitol, according to his statements to FBI agents. When he got there, he said he found a small door to the right of the main entrance open and he walked in and began taking pictures.
Ciarpelli told agents he took his time inside the building sight-seeing, and considered it a "little adventure." After 15 minutes, he felt he shouldn't be there and decided to leave. He told the agents when he tried to leave he got caught up in a mob pushing its way into the building.
When thinking back to that day, agents said he stated he was out of his mind and had never done anything like that before. He told them that on Oct. 28, he bought flights to Washington to attend the inauguration with his wife and a family member, but recently cancelled them.
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Robert Sanford
Knowingly entering or remaining in any restricted building or grounds without lawful authority; Disorderly or disruptive conduct on Capitol grounds; Civil disorder; Assaulting, resisting, or impeding certain officers while engaged in the performance of official duties
What happened
After reviewing video footage and receiving a tip, the FBI identified Sanford as the man shown on video heaving a fire extinguisher from an elevated position on the Capitol steps toward a line of officers who were trying to hold back a mob of rioters. According to charging documents, the extinguisher ricocheted and hit three officers in the head, two of whom were wearing a helmet and one who was not.
The FBI received a tip from a friend of Sanford's who identified Sanford and said he had confessed that the FBI was looking for him, according to the documents. The friend told the agency Sanford recently retired from the Chester Fire Department.
Video taken that day captured Sanford wearing a knit cap with the letters “CFD” on the front, and the person who alerted the FBI confirmed it was Sanford. The tipster told the FBI Sanford said he was on the Capitol grounds that day.
Officials told the Wall Street Journal that the extinguisher Sanford is alleged to have thrown is different from the one that killed Officer Brian Sicknick.
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Andrew Williams
Disorderly conduct
What happened
Andrew Williams, a firefighter and paramedic with the city of Sanford, Florida, was arrested Jan. 12 and charged with disorderly conduct in the Capitol riot.
After Williams was spotted in viral photos from the riot, the city opened an investigation the next day.
Orlando's WESH 2 NBC affiliate reported his attorney said: "The President and the Capitol Police encouraged despicable behavior."
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Kevin D. Loftus
Unlawful entry; disorderly conduct
What happened
The Associated Press reported Loftus was charged with illegal entry and disorderly conduct on the grounds of the Capitol. Court documents stated Loftus posted on social media that he was "one of 700 inside" the Capitol.
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Josiah Colt
Knowingly entering or remaining in any restricted building or grounds without lawful authority; Violent entry and disorderly conduct on Capitol grounds
What happened
CBS2 News, the affiliate in Boise, Idaho, reported Josiah Colt turned himself in at the Ada County Sheriff's Office on Jan. 12.
The FBI had posted a photo of him. In one photo, he’s clinging with one hand onto a ledge over the Latin inscription “Annuit coeptis,” which means “God has favored our undertakings.”
According to court records, the FBI confirmed Colt's identity in a phone interview with a relative.
Colt issued a statement apologizing, saying he loved America and its people. “I recognize my actions that have brought shame upon myself, my family, my friends, and my beautiful country. In the moment I thought I was doing the right thing."
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William Watson
Bond revoked
What happened
The Associated Press reported that Watson was arrested in Alabama because he violated a previous bond when he traveled out of state. A CBS affiliate for eastern Alabama said authorities recognized Watson by the distinctive tattoos on his hand, and from photos of him wearing a tan or yelllow sweatshirt standing next to the man with the horned hat. The TV station reported federal authorities accompanied Auburn Police when they arrested Watson.
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Thomas Baranyi
Restricted building or grounds; Violent entry or disorderly conduct
What happened
Baranyi identified himself in a WUSA-9 interview after the riot, telling a reporter that he was in the Capitol and near where a woman was shot. That woman was later identified as 35-year-old Air Force veteran Ashli Babbitt.
According to court records, the FBI reviewed video clips the Washington Post published of that shooting and identified Baranyi by matching him to his drivers license and his clothing and backpack to the interview clip. The video showed Baranyi standing near the door to the Speaker's Lobby, where Babbitt was shot.
Court records note that in Baranyi's WUSA-9 interview, he said, "We tore through the scaffolding, through flash bangs and tear gas, and blitzed our way in through all the chambers just trying to get into Congress or whoever we could get in to and tell them that we need some kind of investigation into this.”
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Kash Lee Kelly
Knowingly entering or remaining in any restricted building or grounds without lawful authority; Violent entry and disorderly conduct on Capitol grounds
What happened
After receiving tips about Kelly's presence in the Capitol during the riot, the FBI found a photo of Kelly standing on the pedestal of a statue in the building that he posted on Facebook. Law enforcement officers who have known Kelly for years confirmed his identity in screenshots, according to court documents. Kelly, who has nearly 380,000 Facebook followers, also gave an interview after the riot, which the FBI found on YouTube. In it, he says, “We feel like our voices weren’t being heard, which is why we ran through that Capitol Building," according to court records.
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Timothy Hale-Cusanelli
Knowingly entering or remaining in any restricted building or grounds without lawful authority; Disrupting the orderly conduct of government business; Violent entry and disorderly conduct in a Capitol building; Parading, demonstrating, or picketing in a Capitol building; Obstructing a law enforcement officer during a civil disorder
What happened
Hale is enlisted in the Army Reserves, a contractor at Naval Weapons Station Earle and has a "Secret" security clearance and "access to a variety of munitions," according to court records. A confidential source with the Naval Criminal Investigative Service reported Hale-Cusanelli to the FBI after Hale-Cusanelli showed the source video on his phone showing him "making harassing and derogatory statements toward Capitol Police officers both inside and outside the Capitol building."
The confidential source told the FBI that Hale-Cusanelli is an "avowed white supremacist and Nazi sympathizer," according to court records. That source recorded a conversation with Hale-Cusanelli on Jan. 14 in which he admitted to entering the Capitol, to giving directions to others to "advance" and to taking a flag and flagpole that he saw another rioter throw at a Capitol police officer.
Michael Daughtry
Restricted building or grounds
What happened
The Pelham, Georgia, Police Department began investigating Daughtry after being alerted to his social media posts within hours of the Capitol riot, and an officer recorded a call with him that day. According to court records, Daughtry acknowledged that he went "up to the Capitol door" but backed off after being shot with rubber bullets. He told the police officer, "We was the first ones over the fence. Everybody followed us."
The FBI reviewed Daughtry's social media, including Facebook posts in which he said, "We just tore down the fence and stormed the Capitol." He also posted a photo from atop the scaffolding on the Capitol steps set up for the inauguration of President-elect of Joseph Biden.
William Watson
Civil disorders; Restricted building or grounds with a deadly or dangerous weapon; Violent entry or disorderly conduct
What happened
Watson violated bond in a felony drug case in Alabama and was arrested after he traveled out of state. While in custody, the FBI interviewed him twice about the Capitol riot and Watson admitted to going to "support the patriots, support Trump, support freedom.”
Watson told the FBI he went into the building through a broken window and that he was part of a crowd that had police shields and batons when they encountered more officers in the hallway of the Capitol. According to court records, Watson told the FBI he tried to work with the officer to get people to calm down, which a Capitol Police officer confirmed in an interview. The Capitol Police officer told the FBI that Watson had mace. Watson admitted to carrying mace and a pocket knife.
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William McCall Calhoun
Restricted building or grounds; Violent or disorderly conduct; Tampering with a witness, victim or an information
What happened
The FBI received a tip on Nov. 12 that Calhoun was making threats on Facebook, Twitter and Parler, encouraging people "to storm Washington D.C. and peacefully protest while openly carrying firearms," according to court records. The caller read Calhoun's messages, including one that said, "We are going to kill every last communist who stands in Trump’s way."
In social media posts, he called on others to go to Washington and posted from inside the Capitol once he was there. According to court records, he wrote on Facebook that “the first of us who got upstairs kicked in Nancy Pelosi’s office door and pushed down the hall toward her inner sanctum, the mob howling with rage."
Two days after the riot, The Atlanta Journal-Constitution reported it had an exclusive interview with Calhoun, a defense attorney who describes himself as an anti-Communist counter-revolutionary. The newspaper reported Calhoun said: “This was civil disobedience. Anyone who claims it was anything other than civil disobedience was not there, and they did not see it and they do not know.” The newspaper reported he called the people who went into the Capitol "heroic."
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Aaron Mostofsky
Knowingly entering or remaining in any restricted building or grounds without lawful authority; Knowingly, with intent to impede government business or official functions, engaging in disorderly conduct on Capitol Grounds; Unlawful entry and disorderly conduct
What happened
Mostofsky, whom the Gothamist identified as a Brooklyn native, appears in several photos inside the Capitol wearing a police vest over fur-looking pelts.
The Gothamist identified him as the son of a King County Supreme Court judge. Nachman Mostofsky, his brother, told the website, "My brother did nothing illegal. He definitely was not part of the riot."
He was arrested on federal charges in New York on Jan 11.
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William Pepe
Knowingly entering or remaining in any restricted building or grounds without lawful authority
What happened
Photos from the riot showed Pepe in the Capitol holding his phone up, and the FBI confirmed his identity with New York's Metro Transit Authority, according to court records. Pepe works in the mechanical department there and took sick leave to travel to Washington .
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Andrew Wrigley
Knowingly entering or remaining in any restricted building or grounds without lawful authority; Violent entry and disorderly conduct on Capitol grounds
What happened
The FBI reviewed Wrigley's Facebook page, where he posted photos and video from inside the Capitol. On one post he wrote, "At the protest in DC. I went inside the capitol building and got tear gassed," according to court records. Wrigley has since deleted his Facebook page.
Eric Gavelek Munchel
Knowingly entering or remaining in any restricted building or grounds without lawful authority and one count of violent entry and disorderly conduct on Capitol grounds
What happened
Munchel, 30, is allegedly the man in photos dressed in all-black, carrying zip ties as he stepped over a row of seats inside the Capitol. He was arrested on Jan 10. in Nashville. In a news release, federal authorities said he appeared to be carrying plastic restraints, an item in a holster on his right hip and a cell phone mounted on his chest with the camera facing outward. A story in the British newspaper, The Sunday Times, said Munchel traveled to D.C. with his mother and was interviewed there after the riot. The story quotes Munchel as saying: "We wanted to show that we’re willing to rise up, band together and fight if necessary. Same as our forefathers, who established this country in 1776."
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Larry Rendell Brock Jr.
Knowingly entering or remaining in any restricted building or grounds without lawful authority and violent entry and disorderly conduct on Capitol grounds
What happened
Brock, a retired Air Force officer, was seen in photos in the Capitol wearing a green helmet, tactical vest and military patches. After he was identified in photos holding plastic zip-tie handcuffs, he gave an interview to The New Yorker. The story stated Brock said he had gone to D.C. to demonstrate peacefully after hearing the president ask his supporters to be there.
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Derrick Evans
Knowingly entering or remaining in any restricted building or grounds without lawful authority; and one count of violent entry and disorderly conduct on Capitol Grounds
What happened
Evans was elected to the West Virginia House of Delegates last fall, but resigned over the weekend after filming himself storming the Capitol.
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Doug Jensen
Knowingly entering or remaining in any restricted building or grounds without lawful authority; Disrupting the orderly conduct of government business; Violent entry and disorderly conduct in a Capitol building ; Parading, demonstrating or picketing in a Capitol building; Obstructing a law enforcement officer during a civil disorder
What happened
Wearing a QAnon shirt emblazoned with a bald eagle, Jensen was in numerous photographs and videos inside the Capitol. He told his family he was let in to the Capitol. He regularly posted about the QAnon conspiracy theory on his social media accounts. His employer, Forrest & Associate Masonry in Des Moines, fired him on Jan. 8.
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Jacob Anthony Chansley
Jake Angeli
Knowingly entering or remaining in any restricted building or grounds without lawful authority, and with violent entry and disorderly conduct on Capitol grounds
What happened
Most notable for his horned, fur hat and red, white and blue face paint in viral photos from the Capitol, authorities said Chansley, known as Jake Angeli, also carried a 6-foot spear with an American flag tied just below the top.
Chansely was familiar to many in his native Arizona for his appearances at rallies He told police he'd traveled to D.C. in a group of "patriots" at the president's request.
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Adam Johnson
Knowingly entering or remaining in any restricted building or grounds without lawful authority; one count of theft of government property; and one count of violent entry and disorderly conduct on Capitol grounds
What happened
Photos from the riot show Adam Christian Johnson smiling under his Trump cap, casually holding a lectern under his arm.
By Saturday, Johnson, 36, had been arrested and was booked into the Pinellas County Jail in Florida on a warrant from the U.S. Marshal's office. Photos on his Facebook page, since deleted, show the Manatee County, Florida man descending into Washington D.C. for the rally. Johnson had misdemeanor drug arrests in 2004 and 2005 and was involved in a sealed domestic relations court case from 2010.
Johnson is a married father of five. They live in a six-bedroom, 4,000-square-foot, pool home in southwest Florida.
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Nick Ochs
Unlawful entry into restricted buildings or grounds
What happened
Ochs is a co-founder of the Hawaii Proud Boys. The Proud Boys is an extremist group with ties to white nationalism. A U.S. Marine Corps combat veteran, he posted a photo of himself in the Capitol smoking a cigarette on Twitter Wednesday afternoon. He told CNN he did not break in, he just walked in.
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Richard "Bigo" Barnett
Bigo
Knowingly entering or remaining in any restricted building or grounds without lawful entry; violent entry and disorderly conduct on Capitol grounds; and theft of public money, property, or records.
What happened
A photo of Barnett with his feet up on a staffer's desk inside the offices of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi quickly went viral.
He bragged on camera afterward that he had been escorted out but not arrested. A Trump supporter who attended a "Stop the Steal" rally in Northwest Arkansas in November, Barnett has a long history of financial woes, online records show.
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Cleveland Meredith
Making interstate threats to Speaker Nancy Pelosi
What happened
Cleveland Grover Meredith was charged with threatening Pelosi after driving to D.C. from Colorado. He missed the riot after experiencing troubles with his truck and trailer, according to an FBI arrest complaint. Meredith arrived Thursday and was later arrested at a Holiday Inn.
Officers found a Glock 19, a 9mm pistol, a Tavor X95 rifle and hundreds of rounds of ammunition in his truck and trailer.
In the complaint, the FBI said Meredith had texted a relative saying he was “thinking about heading over to Pelosi's (expletive) speech and putting a bullet in her noggin on Live TV,” with a purple devil emoji.
In a later text conversation about Pelosi, the complaint said, Meredith wrote, “Dead Bitch Walking. I predict that within 12 days, many in our country will die.”
But he added, "LOL, jus havin fun."
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Anthime J. Gionet
"Baked Alaska"
Knowingly entering or remaining in any restricted building or grounds without lawful authority; Violent entry and disorderly conduct on Capitol grounds
What happened
Tim Gionet, a right-wing social media personality known as “Baked Alaska," was photographed as he livestreamed the scene from inside the Capitol with more than 5,100 viewers watching.
Authorities in Arizona later stated his trip to Washington, D.C. violated the terms of an earlier release agreement after a December arrest for assault, disorderly conduct and criminal trespass.
The Anchorage Daily News reported Gionet graduated from Grace Christian School in Anchorage. The Southern Poverty Law Center has noted his participation in other events, including the controversial “Unite the Right” white supremacist rally in Charlottesville, Virginia in August 2017.
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Bradley Rukstales
Knowingly entering or remaining in any restricted building or grounds without lawful authority; or knowingly, with intent to impede government business or official functions, engaging in disorderly conduct on Capitol grounds; and violent entry and disorderly conduct on Capitol grounds
What happened
The CEO of an Illinois company, Brad Rukstales was arrested by Capitol Police for taking part in the Capitol riots. Federal authorities then filed additional charges. He admitted to entering the Capitol building.
According to federal court records, he was part of a crowd that encountered Capitol Police on the upper level near the door to the House atrium. Police said he and five others in that crowd were arrested after they ignored orders to leave the building.
Federal prosecutors later added several charges. Campaign finance reports show Rukstales contributed more than $25,000 to Trump’s campaign and other GOP committees during the 2020 election cycle. Following the arrest, his employer, Cognesia, stated he was fired. "It was the single worst personal decision of my life,” Rukstales told CBS Chicago. “I have no excuse for my actions and wish that I could take them back."
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Christopher Alberts
Carrying a Pistol Without a License (Outside Home or Place of Business) 2015, Possessing a Firearm on Capitol Grounds, Curfew Violation, Possession of Unregistered Ammunition, Possession of a Large Capacity Ammunition Feeding Device (and)
What happened
As Christopher Michael Alberts of Maryland was being escorted away from the Capitol on Wednesday, a Metro Police officer noticed a bulge on Alberts' hip, a complaint stated. A closer inspection revealed two separate holsters, one with a 9 mm weapon with a single round in the chamber and a fully loaded 12-round magazine and the other with a second fully loaded 12-round magazine. Alberts also was wearing a bulletproof vest and carrying a backpack with a gas mask, pocketknife and an MRE.
Alberts told officers he was carrying the gun for personal protection and didn't intend to use it to harm anyone.
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Cindy Fitchett
Knowingly entering or remaining in any restricted building or grounds without lawful authority; or knowingly, with intent to impede government business or official functions, engaging in disorderly conduct on Capitol grounds; and violent entry and disorderly conduct on Capitol grounds.
What happened
Fitchett entered the Capitol during the riots and was part of a crowd that encountered Capitol Police on the upper level near the door to the House atrium, according to federal court records. Capitol Police arrested Fitchett and five others after they ignored orders to leave the building.
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David Blair
Assaulting a police officer
What happened
According to D.C. Superior Court records, Blair struck Metro Police officers who were holding the police line at the lower West terrace door of the Capitol with a "lacrosse type stick." MPD officers struck him with batons and Blair's head was injured when officers took him to the ground to arrest him. MPD called Capitol Police to make the arrest. According to court records, while Blair awaited an ambulance he told officers, "(I was) being an idiot, pumped up and didn’t move back. Accept everything. I’m sorry, I got hit four times, I had a knife in my bag because I was scared of ANTIFA jumping me on the way back.”
Douglas Sweet
Knowingly entering or remaining in any restricted building or grounds without lawful authority; or knowingly, with intent to impede government business or official functions, engaging in disorderly conduct on Capitol grounds; and violent entry and disorderly conduct on Capitol grounds
What happened
Sweet entered the Capitol during the riots and was part of a crowd that encountered Capitol Police on the upper level near the door to the House atrium, according to federal court records. Capitol Police arrested Sweet and five others after they ignored orders to leave the building.
Sweet told Virginia television station WTKR that the Capitol had already been breached by the time he arrived and that he walked in. He said he and others “surrendered immediately.”
Sweet told WTKR that he believed Trump’s claims that the election was stolen. No widespread election fraud has been found, and courts around the country have rejected Trump’s claims in dozens of cases.
"Trump asked all the patriots to show up, so I did," Sweet told WKTR.
“I was hoping to go in and talk to the Senate and the House and actually speak,” Sweet added. “First of all, you're not going to get in there unless you walk right in.”
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Grant Moore
Carrying a pistol without a license and unregistered ammunition
What happened
Capitol Police found Moore parked in his white Ford Econoline 150 van near the Capitol, and Moore admitted to having a gun in his backpack on the front passenger seat.
Officers found a Ruger pistol in a holster, according to D.C. Superior Court records. The gun was loaded with six rounds, and officers recovered three more six-round magazines along with 12 loose rounds.
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Joshua Pruitt
Riot Act - Felony, curfew violation, unlawful entry, knowingly entering or remaining in any restricted building or grounds without lawful authority
What happened
Joshua Pruitt, 39, appears twice among arrest records of the Metro Police for violating the Riot Act, unlawful entry and curfew violations. A day after the riot, the U.S. attorney charged a man with the same name with knowingly entering or remaining in any restricted building or grounds without lawful authority.
A man with the same name, who lives in D.C., took the Proud Boys oath in a video posted to Twitter in mid-November during a gathering of Trump supporters. However, a few days later, in a Facebook comment, that man denounced the group. Attempts to reach Pruitt were unsuccessful.
Lonnie Leroy Coffman
Possession of an unregistered firearm (destructive device) and carrying a pistol without a license.
What happened
When authorities found Coffman's truck near the Capitol, they reported finding 11 Molotov cocktails -- Mason jars filled with flammable liquids -- in addition to guns and ammunition.
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Mark Leffingwell
Knowingly entering or remaining in any restricted building or grounds without lawful authority; assault on a federal law enforcement officer; and violent entry and disorderly conduct on Capitol grounds
What happened
Leffingwell is accused of entering the Senate side of the Capitol. When police stopped him, the complaint says, he struck an officer in the helmet and chest.
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Matthew Council
Unlawful entry
What happened
Authorities accuse Council of unlawfully entering the Capitol building. When police stopped him, the complaint says, he pushed an officer.
Michael Curzio
Knowingly entering or remaining in any restricted building or grounds without lawful authority; or knowingly, with intent to impede government business or official functions, engaging in disorderly conduct on Capitol grounds; and violent entry and disorderly conduct on Capitol grounds
What happened
Michael Curzio was among the rioters arrested by U.S. Capitol Police for unlawful entry. It was not the Florida man’s first brush with law enforcement.
Curzio, 35, was released from prison in February 2019 following an eight-year sentence for attempted first-degree murder, according to records from the Florida Department of Corrections.
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Terry Brown
Knowingly entering or remaining in any restricted building or grounds without lawful authority; or knowingly, with intent to impede government business or official functions, engaging in disorderly conduct on Capitol grounds; and violent entry and disorderly conduct on Capitol grounds
What happened
Brown entered the Capitol during the riots and was part of a crowd that encountered Capitol Police on the upper level near the door to the House atrium, according to federal court records. Capitol Police arrested Brown and five others after they ignored orders to leave the building.
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Thomas Gallagher
Knowingly entering or remaining in any restricted building or grounds without lawful entry; or knowingly, with intent to impede government business or official functions, engaging in disorderly conduct on Capitol grounds and disorderly conduct on Capitol grounds
What happened
Gallagher entered the Capitol during the riots and was part of a crowd that encountered Capitol Police on the upper level near the door to the House atrium, according to federal court records. Capitol Police arrested Gallagher and five others after they ignored orders to leave the building.
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- Age: 38
- Arrested or charged on: 1/13/2021
- Home state: Colorado
Obstructing law enforcement engaged in official duties incident to civil disorder; Knowingly entering or remaining in any restricted building or grounds without lawful authority; violent entry and disorderly conduct on Capitol grounds.
What happened
Olympic gold-medal swimmer Klete Keller was arrested after being identified in video from the Capitol riot. At 6-foot-6, Keller is a five-time Olympic medalist and three-time Olympian. His height helped the FBI identify him after SwimSwam published a story confirming Keller was in footage shot by TownHall. Keller wore a jacket with a U.S. Olympic patch in the video.
Keller had been listed as a real estate agent at Hoff & Leigh in Colorado, which issued a statement the day before Keller's arrest that he had resigned.
The U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Committee responded to reports of Keller's presence at the Capitol before his arrest without naming him. CEO Sarah Hirshland said, "I strongly condemn the actions of the rioters at the U.S. Capitol. They do not represent the values of the United States of America or of Team USA."
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Robert Keith Packer
- Age: 56
- Arrested or charged on: 1/13/21
- Home state: Virginia
Knowingly entering or remaining in any restricted building or grounds without lawful authority and violent entry or disorderly conduct on Capitol grounds.
What happened
The "Camp Auschwitz" shirt Robert K. Packer was photographed wearing at the Capitol riots ultimately helped lead to his identification and arrest. In an affidavit accompanying an arrest warrant, the FBI noted they received a tip because someone in the community recognized Packer and had seen him wearing the shirt in the past.
The complaint noted the shirt, with a human skull and the phrase "Work brings freedom" appears to be a symbol of Nazi hate ideology.
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Kevin J. Lyons
- Arrested or charged on: 1/13/2021
- Home state: Illinois
Knowingly entering or remaining in any restricted building or grounds without lawful authority; Violent entry and disorderly conduct on Capitol grounds
What happened
Lyons posted a photo of a map to his Instagram on Jan. 5, saying: "I refuse to tell my children that I sat back and did nothing. I'm heading to DC to STOP THE STEAL!! #MAGA #KAG."
The arrest complaint states that he later posted a photo from the Capitol of a sign over the door to House Speaker Nancy Pelosi's office with a comment saying "WHOS HOUSE?!?!? OUR HOUSE!!"
Two days later, two FBI agents who interviewed Lyons at his home reported that he was evasive about whether he entered the Capitol, telling them he dreamed it and that in the dream, "people really didn't have much choice of where they were going because of the mob." When the agents asked to see his phone, he showed the officers the photo he posted on Instagram and agreed to upload two videos he recorded inside the Capitol to YouTube and email them the link. He eventually told the agents he had walked up the Capitol stairs and entered through its rear doors. He said he went into Pelosi's office where an armed police officer told him to get out.
Jenny Cudd
- Arrested or charged on: 1/13/2021
- Home state: Texas
Restricted building or grounds; Violent entry or disorderly conduct
What happened
A former candidate for mayor in Midland, Texas, Jenny Cudd, wearing a Trump flag as a cape, posted a video saying: “We did break down Nancy Pelosi’s office door.”
“I’m proud of everything I was a part of today,” the florist shop owner stated in another video clip. “The government serves at the consent of the governed. Well, the governed are pissed off.”
The Midland Reporter Telegram reported that Cudd said she didn't do anything unlawful. The newspaper also reported Cudd said: “When (Vice President) Pence betrayed us is when we decided to storm the Capitol.”
According to court records, the FBI tracked Cudd and Eliel Rosa, whom she was later arrested with, as they walked through the Capitol rotunda on the day of the riot.
Eliel Rosa
- Arrested or charged on: 1/13/2021
- Home state: Texas
Restricted building or grounds; Violent entry or disorderly conduct
What happened
Rosa was arrested with Jenny Cudd, who was photographed with him in the Capitol rotunda. Cudd, a former mayoral candidate in Midland, Texas, appeared in Facebook videos and in photos admitting to entering the Capitol. In a Facebook video, she said, "We did break down the Nancy Pelosi’s office door."
The FBI tracked Rosa and Cudd's movements in the rotunda using surveillance footage. In an interview with the FBI two days after the riot, Rosa admitted he and Cudd entered the Capitol.
Albert Ciarpelli
- Arrested or charged on: 1/13/2021
- Home state: New York
Knowingly entering or remaining in any restricted building or grounds without lawful authority; Violent entry and disorderly conduct on Capitol grounds
What happened
Albert Ciarpelli drove from Syracuse to Washington, D.C. to attend the rally. After the rally he joined the crowd walking toward the Capitol, according to his statements to FBI agents. When he got there, he said he found a small door to the right of the main entrance open and he walked in and began taking pictures.
Ciarpelli told agents he took his time inside the building sight-seeing, and considered it a "little adventure." After 15 minutes, he felt he shouldn't be there and decided to leave. He told the agents when he tried to leave he got caught up in a mob pushing its way into the building.
When thinking back to that day, agents said he stated he was out of his mind and had never done anything like that before. He told them that on Oct. 28, he bought flights to Washington to attend the inauguration with his wife and a family member, but recently cancelled them.
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Robert Sanford
- Age: 55
- Arrested or charged on: 1/13/21
- Home state: Pennsylvania
Knowingly entering or remaining in any restricted building or grounds without lawful authority; Disorderly or disruptive conduct on Capitol grounds; Civil disorder; Assaulting, resisting, or impeding certain officers while engaged in the performance of official duties
What happened
After reviewing video footage and receiving a tip, the FBI identified Sanford as the man shown on video heaving a fire extinguisher from an elevated position on the Capitol steps toward a line of officers who were trying to hold back a mob of rioters. According to charging documents, the extinguisher ricocheted and hit three officers in the head, two of whom were wearing a helmet and one who was not.
The FBI received a tip from a friend of Sanford's who identified Sanford and said he had confessed that the FBI was looking for him, according to the documents. The friend told the agency Sanford recently retired from the Chester Fire Department.
Video taken that day captured Sanford wearing a knit cap with the letters “CFD” on the front, and the person who alerted the FBI confirmed it was Sanford. The tipster told the FBI Sanford said he was on the Capitol grounds that day.
Officials told the Wall Street Journal that the extinguisher Sanford is alleged to have thrown is different from the one that killed Officer Brian Sicknick.
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Andrew Williams
- Arrested or charged on: 1/12/2021
- Home state: Florida
Disorderly conduct
What happened
Andrew Williams, a firefighter and paramedic with the city of Sanford, Florida, was arrested Jan. 12 and charged with disorderly conduct in the Capitol riot.
After Williams was spotted in viral photos from the riot, the city opened an investigation the next day.
Orlando's WESH 2 NBC affiliate reported his attorney said: "The President and the Capitol Police encouraged despicable behavior."
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Kevin D. Loftus
- Age: 52
- Arrested or charged on: 1/12/2021
- Home state: Wisconsin
Unlawful entry; disorderly conduct
What happened
The Associated Press reported Loftus was charged with illegal entry and disorderly conduct on the grounds of the Capitol. Court documents stated Loftus posted on social media that he was "one of 700 inside" the Capitol.
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Josiah Colt
- Arrested or charged on: 1/12/2021
- Home state: Idaho
Knowingly entering or remaining in any restricted building or grounds without lawful authority; Violent entry and disorderly conduct on Capitol grounds
What happened
CBS2 News, the affiliate in Boise, Idaho, reported Josiah Colt turned himself in at the Ada County Sheriff's Office on Jan. 12.
The FBI had posted a photo of him. In one photo, he’s clinging with one hand onto a ledge over the Latin inscription “Annuit coeptis,” which means “God has favored our undertakings.”
According to court records, the FBI confirmed Colt's identity in a phone interview with a relative.
Colt issued a statement apologizing, saying he loved America and its people. “I recognize my actions that have brought shame upon myself, my family, my friends, and my beautiful country. In the moment I thought I was doing the right thing."
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William Watson
- Age: 23
- Arrested or charged on: 1/12/2021
- Home state: Alabama
Bond revoked
What happened
The Associated Press reported that Watson was arrested in Alabama because he violated a previous bond when he traveled out of state. A CBS affiliate for eastern Alabama said authorities recognized Watson by the distinctive tattoos on his hand, and from photos of him wearing a tan or yelllow sweatshirt standing next to the man with the horned hat. The TV station reported federal authorities accompanied Auburn Police when they arrested Watson.
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Thomas Baranyi
- Age: 29
- Arrested or charged on: 1/12/21
- Home state: New Jersey
Restricted building or grounds; Violent entry or disorderly conduct
What happened
Baranyi identified himself in a WUSA-9 interview after the riot, telling a reporter that he was in the Capitol and near where a woman was shot. That woman was later identified as 35-year-old Air Force veteran Ashli Babbitt.
According to court records, the FBI reviewed video clips the Washington Post published of that shooting and identified Baranyi by matching him to his drivers license and his clothing and backpack to the interview clip. The video showed Baranyi standing near the door to the Speaker's Lobby, where Babbitt was shot.
Court records note that in Baranyi's WUSA-9 interview, he said, "We tore through the scaffolding, through flash bangs and tear gas, and blitzed our way in through all the chambers just trying to get into Congress or whoever we could get in to and tell them that we need some kind of investigation into this.”
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Kash Lee Kelly
- Arrested or charged on: 1/12/21
Knowingly entering or remaining in any restricted building or grounds without lawful authority; Violent entry and disorderly conduct on Capitol grounds
What happened
After receiving tips about Kelly's presence in the Capitol during the riot, the FBI found a photo of Kelly standing on the pedestal of a statue in the building that he posted on Facebook. Law enforcement officers who have known Kelly for years confirmed his identity in screenshots, according to court documents. Kelly, who has nearly 380,000 Facebook followers, also gave an interview after the riot, which the FBI found on YouTube. In it, he says, “We feel like our voices weren’t being heard, which is why we ran through that Capitol Building," according to court records.
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Timothy Hale-Cusanelli
- Arrested or charged on: 1/12/21
- Home state: New Jersey
Knowingly entering or remaining in any restricted building or grounds without lawful authority; Disrupting the orderly conduct of government business; Violent entry and disorderly conduct in a Capitol building; Parading, demonstrating, or picketing in a Capitol building; Obstructing a law enforcement officer during a civil disorder
What happened
Hale is enlisted in the Army Reserves, a contractor at Naval Weapons Station Earle and has a "Secret" security clearance and "access to a variety of munitions," according to court records. A confidential source with the Naval Criminal Investigative Service reported Hale-Cusanelli to the FBI after Hale-Cusanelli showed the source video on his phone showing him "making harassing and derogatory statements toward Capitol Police officers both inside and outside the Capitol building."
The confidential source told the FBI that Hale-Cusanelli is an "avowed white supremacist and Nazi sympathizer," according to court records. That source recorded a conversation with Hale-Cusanelli on Jan. 14 in which he admitted to entering the Capitol, to giving directions to others to "advance" and to taking a flag and flagpole that he saw another rioter throw at a Capitol police officer.
Michael Daughtry
- Arrested or charged on: 1/12/21
- Home state: Georgia
Restricted building or grounds
What happened
The Pelham, Georgia, Police Department began investigating Daughtry after being alerted to his social media posts within hours of the Capitol riot, and an officer recorded a call with him that day. According to court records, Daughtry acknowledged that he went "up to the Capitol door" but backed off after being shot with rubber bullets. He told the police officer, "We was the first ones over the fence. Everybody followed us."
The FBI reviewed Daughtry's social media, including Facebook posts in which he said, "We just tore down the fence and stormed the Capitol." He also posted a photo from atop the scaffolding on the Capitol steps set up for the inauguration of President-elect of Joseph Biden.
William Watson
- Arrested or charged on: 1/12/2021
- Home state: Alabama
Civil disorders; Restricted building or grounds with a deadly or dangerous weapon; Violent entry or disorderly conduct
What happened
Watson violated bond in a felony drug case in Alabama and was arrested after he traveled out of state. While in custody, the FBI interviewed him twice about the Capitol riot and Watson admitted to going to "support the patriots, support Trump, support freedom.”
Watson told the FBI he went into the building through a broken window and that he was part of a crowd that had police shields and batons when they encountered more officers in the hallway of the Capitol. According to court records, Watson told the FBI he tried to work with the officer to get people to calm down, which a Capitol Police officer confirmed in an interview. The Capitol Police officer told the FBI that Watson had mace. Watson admitted to carrying mace and a pocket knife.
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William McCall Calhoun
- Arrested or charged on: 1/12/21
- Home state: Georgia
Restricted building or grounds; Violent or disorderly conduct; Tampering with a witness, victim or an information
What happened
The FBI received a tip on Nov. 12 that Calhoun was making threats on Facebook, Twitter and Parler, encouraging people "to storm Washington D.C. and peacefully protest while openly carrying firearms," according to court records. The caller read Calhoun's messages, including one that said, "We are going to kill every last communist who stands in Trump’s way."
In social media posts, he called on others to go to Washington and posted from inside the Capitol once he was there. According to court records, he wrote on Facebook that “the first of us who got upstairs kicked in Nancy Pelosi’s office door and pushed down the hall toward her inner sanctum, the mob howling with rage."
Two days after the riot, The Atlanta Journal-Constitution reported it had an exclusive interview with Calhoun, a defense attorney who describes himself as an anti-Communist counter-revolutionary. The newspaper reported Calhoun said: “This was civil disobedience. Anyone who claims it was anything other than civil disobedience was not there, and they did not see it and they do not know.” The newspaper reported he called the people who went into the Capitol "heroic."
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Aaron Mostofsky
- Arrested or charged on: 1/11/2021
- Home state: New York
Knowingly entering or remaining in any restricted building or grounds without lawful authority; Knowingly, with intent to impede government business or official functions, engaging in disorderly conduct on Capitol Grounds; Unlawful entry and disorderly conduct
What happened
Mostofsky, whom the Gothamist identified as a Brooklyn native, appears in several photos inside the Capitol wearing a police vest over fur-looking pelts.
The Gothamist identified him as the son of a King County Supreme Court judge. Nachman Mostofsky, his brother, told the website, "My brother did nothing illegal. He definitely was not part of the riot."
He was arrested on federal charges in New York on Jan 11.
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William Pepe
- Arrested or charged on: 1/11/2021
- Home state: New York
Knowingly entering or remaining in any restricted building or grounds without lawful authority
What happened
Photos from the riot showed Pepe in the Capitol holding his phone up, and the FBI confirmed his identity with New York's Metro Transit Authority, according to court records. Pepe works in the mechanical department there and took sick leave to travel to Washington .
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Andrew Wrigley
- Arrested or charged on: 1/11/21
- Home state: Pennsylvania
Knowingly entering or remaining in any restricted building or grounds without lawful authority; Violent entry and disorderly conduct on Capitol grounds
What happened
The FBI reviewed Wrigley's Facebook page, where he posted photos and video from inside the Capitol. On one post he wrote, "At the protest in DC. I went inside the capitol building and got tear gassed," according to court records. Wrigley has since deleted his Facebook page.
Eric Gavelek Munchel
- Age: 30
- Arrested or charged on: 1/10/2021
- Home state: Tennessee
Knowingly entering or remaining in any restricted building or grounds without lawful authority and one count of violent entry and disorderly conduct on Capitol grounds
What happened
Munchel, 30, is allegedly the man in photos dressed in all-black, carrying zip ties as he stepped over a row of seats inside the Capitol. He was arrested on Jan 10. in Nashville. In a news release, federal authorities said he appeared to be carrying plastic restraints, an item in a holster on his right hip and a cell phone mounted on his chest with the camera facing outward. A story in the British newspaper, The Sunday Times, said Munchel traveled to D.C. with his mother and was interviewed there after the riot. The story quotes Munchel as saying: "We wanted to show that we’re willing to rise up, band together and fight if necessary. Same as our forefathers, who established this country in 1776."
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Larry Rendell Brock Jr.
- Arrested or charged on: 1/10/2021
- Home state: Texas
Knowingly entering or remaining in any restricted building or grounds without lawful authority and violent entry and disorderly conduct on Capitol grounds
What happened
Brock, a retired Air Force officer, was seen in photos in the Capitol wearing a green helmet, tactical vest and military patches. After he was identified in photos holding plastic zip-tie handcuffs, he gave an interview to The New Yorker. The story stated Brock said he had gone to D.C. to demonstrate peacefully after hearing the president ask his supporters to be there.
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Derrick Evans
- Arrested or charged on: 1/9/2021
- Home state: West Virginia
Knowingly entering or remaining in any restricted building or grounds without lawful authority; and one count of violent entry and disorderly conduct on Capitol Grounds
What happened
Evans was elected to the West Virginia House of Delegates last fall, but resigned over the weekend after filming himself storming the Capitol.
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Doug Jensen
- Arrested or charged on: 1/9/2021
- Home state: Iowa
Knowingly entering or remaining in any restricted building or grounds without lawful authority; Disrupting the orderly conduct of government business; Violent entry and disorderly conduct in a Capitol building ; Parading, demonstrating or picketing in a Capitol building; Obstructing a law enforcement officer during a civil disorder
What happened
Wearing a QAnon shirt emblazoned with a bald eagle, Jensen was in numerous photographs and videos inside the Capitol. He told his family he was let in to the Capitol. He regularly posted about the QAnon conspiracy theory on his social media accounts. His employer, Forrest & Associate Masonry in Des Moines, fired him on Jan. 8.
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Jacob Anthony Chansley
Jake Angeli
- Arrested or charged on: 1/9/2021
- Home state: Arizona
Knowingly entering or remaining in any restricted building or grounds without lawful authority, and with violent entry and disorderly conduct on Capitol grounds
What happened
Most notable for his horned, fur hat and red, white and blue face paint in viral photos from the Capitol, authorities said Chansley, known as Jake Angeli, also carried a 6-foot spear with an American flag tied just below the top.
Chansely was familiar to many in his native Arizona for his appearances at rallies He told police he'd traveled to D.C. in a group of "patriots" at the president's request.
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Adam Johnson
- Age: 36
- Arrested or charged on: 1/8/2021
- Home state: Florida
Knowingly entering or remaining in any restricted building or grounds without lawful authority; one count of theft of government property; and one count of violent entry and disorderly conduct on Capitol grounds
What happened
Photos from the riot show Adam Christian Johnson smiling under his Trump cap, casually holding a lectern under his arm.
By Saturday, Johnson, 36, had been arrested and was booked into the Pinellas County Jail in Florida on a warrant from the U.S. Marshal's office. Photos on his Facebook page, since deleted, show the Manatee County, Florida man descending into Washington D.C. for the rally. Johnson had misdemeanor drug arrests in 2004 and 2005 and was involved in a sealed domestic relations court case from 2010.
Johnson is a married father of five. They live in a six-bedroom, 4,000-square-foot, pool home in southwest Florida.
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Nick Ochs
- Age: 34
- Arrested or charged on: 1/8/2021
- Home state: Hawaii
Unlawful entry into restricted buildings or grounds
What happened
Ochs is a co-founder of the Hawaii Proud Boys. The Proud Boys is an extremist group with ties to white nationalism. A U.S. Marine Corps combat veteran, he posted a photo of himself in the Capitol smoking a cigarette on Twitter Wednesday afternoon. He told CNN he did not break in, he just walked in.
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Richard "Bigo" Barnett
Bigo
- Age: 60
- Arrested or charged on: 1/8/2021
- Home state: Arkansas
Knowingly entering or remaining in any restricted building or grounds without lawful entry; violent entry and disorderly conduct on Capitol grounds; and theft of public money, property, or records.
What happened
A photo of Barnett with his feet up on a staffer's desk inside the offices of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi quickly went viral.
He bragged on camera afterward that he had been escorted out but not arrested. A Trump supporter who attended a "Stop the Steal" rally in Northwest Arkansas in November, Barnett has a long history of financial woes, online records show.
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Cleveland Meredith
- Arrested or charged on: 1/7/2021
- Home state: Georgia
Making interstate threats to Speaker Nancy Pelosi
What happened
Cleveland Grover Meredith was charged with threatening Pelosi after driving to D.C. from Colorado. He missed the riot after experiencing troubles with his truck and trailer, according to an FBI arrest complaint. Meredith arrived Thursday and was later arrested at a Holiday Inn.
Officers found a Glock 19, a 9mm pistol, a Tavor X95 rifle and hundreds of rounds of ammunition in his truck and trailer.
In the complaint, the FBI said Meredith had texted a relative saying he was “thinking about heading over to Pelosi's (expletive) speech and putting a bullet in her noggin on Live TV,” with a purple devil emoji.
In a later text conversation about Pelosi, the complaint said, Meredith wrote, “Dead Bitch Walking. I predict that within 12 days, many in our country will die.”
But he added, "LOL, jus havin fun."
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Anthime J. Gionet
"Baked Alaska"
- Age: 33
- Arrested or charged on: 1/7/21
- Home state: Arizona
Knowingly entering or remaining in any restricted building or grounds without lawful authority; Violent entry and disorderly conduct on Capitol grounds
What happened
Tim Gionet, a right-wing social media personality known as “Baked Alaska," was photographed as he livestreamed the scene from inside the Capitol with more than 5,100 viewers watching.
Authorities in Arizona later stated his trip to Washington, D.C. violated the terms of an earlier release agreement after a December arrest for assault, disorderly conduct and criminal trespass.
The Anchorage Daily News reported Gionet graduated from Grace Christian School in Anchorage. The Southern Poverty Law Center has noted his participation in other events, including the controversial “Unite the Right” white supremacist rally in Charlottesville, Virginia in August 2017.
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Bradley Rukstales
- Age: 52
- Arrested or charged on: 1/6/2021
- Home state: Illinois
Knowingly entering or remaining in any restricted building or grounds without lawful authority; or knowingly, with intent to impede government business or official functions, engaging in disorderly conduct on Capitol grounds; and violent entry and disorderly conduct on Capitol grounds
What happened
The CEO of an Illinois company, Brad Rukstales was arrested by Capitol Police for taking part in the Capitol riots. Federal authorities then filed additional charges. He admitted to entering the Capitol building.
According to federal court records, he was part of a crowd that encountered Capitol Police on the upper level near the door to the House atrium. Police said he and five others in that crowd were arrested after they ignored orders to leave the building.
Federal prosecutors later added several charges. Campaign finance reports show Rukstales contributed more than $25,000 to Trump’s campaign and other GOP committees during the 2020 election cycle. Following the arrest, his employer, Cognesia, stated he was fired. "It was the single worst personal decision of my life,” Rukstales told CBS Chicago. “I have no excuse for my actions and wish that I could take them back."
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Christopher Alberts
- Arrested or charged on: 1/6/2021
- Home state: Maryland
Carrying a Pistol Without a License (Outside Home or Place of Business) 2015, Possessing a Firearm on Capitol Grounds, Curfew Violation, Possession of Unregistered Ammunition, Possession of a Large Capacity Ammunition Feeding Device (and)
What happened
As Christopher Michael Alberts of Maryland was being escorted away from the Capitol on Wednesday, a Metro Police officer noticed a bulge on Alberts' hip, a complaint stated. A closer inspection revealed two separate holsters, one with a 9 mm weapon with a single round in the chamber and a fully loaded 12-round magazine and the other with a second fully loaded 12-round magazine. Alberts also was wearing a bulletproof vest and carrying a backpack with a gas mask, pocketknife and an MRE.
Alberts told officers he was carrying the gun for personal protection and didn't intend to use it to harm anyone.
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Cindy Fitchett
- Arrested or charged on: 1/6/2021
- Home state: Virginia
Knowingly entering or remaining in any restricted building or grounds without lawful authority; or knowingly, with intent to impede government business or official functions, engaging in disorderly conduct on Capitol grounds; and violent entry and disorderly conduct on Capitol grounds.
What happened
Fitchett entered the Capitol during the riots and was part of a crowd that encountered Capitol Police on the upper level near the door to the House atrium, according to federal court records. Capitol Police arrested Fitchett and five others after they ignored orders to leave the building.
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David Blair
- Age: 26
- Arrested or charged on: 1/6/2021
- Home state: Maryland
Assaulting a police officer
What happened
According to D.C. Superior Court records, Blair struck Metro Police officers who were holding the police line at the lower West terrace door of the Capitol with a "lacrosse type stick." MPD officers struck him with batons and Blair's head was injured when officers took him to the ground to arrest him. MPD called Capitol Police to make the arrest. According to court records, while Blair awaited an ambulance he told officers, "(I was) being an idiot, pumped up and didn’t move back. Accept everything. I’m sorry, I got hit four times, I had a knife in my bag because I was scared of ANTIFA jumping me on the way back.”
Douglas Sweet
- Arrested or charged on: 1/6/2021
- Home state: Virginia
Knowingly entering or remaining in any restricted building or grounds without lawful authority; or knowingly, with intent to impede government business or official functions, engaging in disorderly conduct on Capitol grounds; and violent entry and disorderly conduct on Capitol grounds
What happened
Sweet entered the Capitol during the riots and was part of a crowd that encountered Capitol Police on the upper level near the door to the House atrium, according to federal court records. Capitol Police arrested Sweet and five others after they ignored orders to leave the building.
Sweet told Virginia television station WTKR that the Capitol had already been breached by the time he arrived and that he walked in. He said he and others “surrendered immediately.”
Sweet told WTKR that he believed Trump’s claims that the election was stolen. No widespread election fraud has been found, and courts around the country have rejected Trump’s claims in dozens of cases.
"Trump asked all the patriots to show up, so I did," Sweet told WKTR.
“I was hoping to go in and talk to the Senate and the House and actually speak,” Sweet added. “First of all, you're not going to get in there unless you walk right in.”
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Grant Moore
- Arrested or charged on: 1/6/2021
- Home state: Georgia
Carrying a pistol without a license and unregistered ammunition
What happened
Capitol Police found Moore parked in his white Ford Econoline 150 van near the Capitol, and Moore admitted to having a gun in his backpack on the front passenger seat.
Officers found a Ruger pistol in a holster, according to D.C. Superior Court records. The gun was loaded with six rounds, and officers recovered three more six-round magazines along with 12 loose rounds.
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Joshua Pruitt
- Age: 39
- Arrested or charged on: 1/6/2021
- Home state: DC
Riot Act - Felony, curfew violation, unlawful entry, knowingly entering or remaining in any restricted building or grounds without lawful authority
What happened
Joshua Pruitt, 39, appears twice among arrest records of the Metro Police for violating the Riot Act, unlawful entry and curfew violations. A day after the riot, the U.S. attorney charged a man with the same name with knowingly entering or remaining in any restricted building or grounds without lawful authority.
A man with the same name, who lives in D.C., took the Proud Boys oath in a video posted to Twitter in mid-November during a gathering of Trump supporters. However, a few days later, in a Facebook comment, that man denounced the group. Attempts to reach Pruitt were unsuccessful.
Lonnie Leroy Coffman
- Arrested or charged on: 1/6/2021
- Home state: Alabama
Possession of an unregistered firearm (destructive device) and carrying a pistol without a license.
What happened
When authorities found Coffman's truck near the Capitol, they reported finding 11 Molotov cocktails -- Mason jars filled with flammable liquids -- in addition to guns and ammunition.
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Mark Leffingwell
- Arrested or charged on: 1/6/2021
- Home state: Washington
Knowingly entering or remaining in any restricted building or grounds without lawful authority; assault on a federal law enforcement officer; and violent entry and disorderly conduct on Capitol grounds
What happened
Leffingwell is accused of entering the Senate side of the Capitol. When police stopped him, the complaint says, he struck an officer in the helmet and chest.
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Matthew Council
- Arrested or charged on: 1/6/2021
- Home state: Florida
Unlawful entry
What happened
Authorities accuse Council of unlawfully entering the Capitol building. When police stopped him, the complaint says, he pushed an officer.
Michael Curzio
- Age: 35
- Arrested or charged on: 1/6/2021
- Home state: Florida
Knowingly entering or remaining in any restricted building or grounds without lawful authority; or knowingly, with intent to impede government business or official functions, engaging in disorderly conduct on Capitol grounds; and violent entry and disorderly conduct on Capitol grounds
What happened
Michael Curzio was among the rioters arrested by U.S. Capitol Police for unlawful entry. It was not the Florida man’s first brush with law enforcement.
Curzio, 35, was released from prison in February 2019 following an eight-year sentence for attempted first-degree murder, according to records from the Florida Department of Corrections.
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Terry Brown
- Arrested or charged on: 1/6/2021
- Home state: Pennsylvania
Knowingly entering or remaining in any restricted building or grounds without lawful authority; or knowingly, with intent to impede government business or official functions, engaging in disorderly conduct on Capitol grounds; and violent entry and disorderly conduct on Capitol grounds
What happened
Brown entered the Capitol during the riots and was part of a crowd that encountered Capitol Police on the upper level near the door to the House atrium, according to federal court records. Capitol Police arrested Brown and five others after they ignored orders to leave the building.
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Thomas Gallagher
- Arrested or charged on: 1/6/2021
- Home state: New Hampshire
Knowingly entering or remaining in any restricted building or grounds without lawful entry; or knowingly, with intent to impede government business or official functions, engaging in disorderly conduct on Capitol grounds and disorderly conduct on Capitol grounds
What happened
Gallagher entered the Capitol during the riots and was part of a crowd that encountered Capitol Police on the upper level near the door to the House atrium, according to federal court records. Capitol Police arrested Gallagher and five others after they ignored orders to leave the building.
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"Let me issue and control a nation's money and I care not who writes the laws. - Mayer Rothschild
"Civil disobedience is not our problem. Our problem is civil obedience! People are obedient in the face of poverty, starvation, stupidity, war, and cruelty. Our problem is that grand thieves are running the country. That's our problem!" - Howard Zinn
"If there is no struggle there is no progress. Power concedes nothing without a demand. It never did and never will" - Frederick Douglass
"Civil disobedience is not our problem. Our problem is civil obedience! People are obedient in the face of poverty, starvation, stupidity, war, and cruelty. Our problem is that grand thieves are running the country. That's our problem!" - Howard Zinn
"If there is no struggle there is no progress. Power concedes nothing without a demand. It never did and never will" - Frederick Douglass