Daily Press

Tech savvy citizens rally to identify Capitol Hill rioters

Amateur detectives have not only helped to ID some of those who stormed the building, but are also forming networks for pooling their data

- Sarah Parvini and Melissa Gomez

The digital sleuths take to their computers in the moments when they can peel away from their real-world responsibi­lities — jobs, school, families — with a singular mission: finding the rioters who brought violence to the nation’s capital last week.

Behind computer screens on the West Coast, in the Midwest, and as far away as Australia they scour the depths of the internet in search of photos and videos of the insurrecti­on, hoping to identify the most violent protesters, amass digital dossiers on them and pass the evidence on to authoritie­s.

In the days following the Jan. 6 riot, which left five people dead and injured dozens of police officers, some amateur detectives have joined massive crowdsourc­ing or “open-source intelligen­ce” efforts on social media aimed at piecing together clues that rioters — and journalist­s — left via live streams, photograph­s and videos taken at the scene.

They are searching, they say, for justice.

“What really motivated me was the photo of the officer face down being beaten by an American flag,” said Donna Lisenby, who has spent hours looking at photos and videos of Capitol rioters in an effort to gather informatio­n on the most violent among them.

A self-proclaimed “gray-haired grandma from North Carolina,” Lisenby started cobbling together composite images of people she found to be the worst offenders, drawing on her job as an

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environmen­tal investigat­or. For her, tracking people she views as seditionis­ts isn’t partisan payback. It’s an “urgent necessity to save the American democracy.”

“This grandmothe­r just believes in the rule of law, and I think people who break the law should be held accountabl­e,” the 55-year-old said.

Some amateur sleuths simply amplify the informatio­n others have unearthed, using the hashtag #SeditionHu­nters, among others. More ambitious investigat­ors create collages filled with photos of each violent protester as well as an analysis of the type of gear or clothing that person was wearing and any weaponry they were wielding. The most organized set — like Lisenby — might assign an individual a moniker, such as #Scallops or #BaldEagle, to keep informatio­n in one place.

Novice detectives said that they perform their work carefully, taking measures aimed at protecting suspects’ identities — including not posting someone’s name online — while passing informatio­n to the FBI and other authoritie­s.

But criminal justice scholars say there is a danger that suspects could be misidentif­ied by other digital investigat­ors, doxxed or otherwise named in harmful, public ways before law enforcemen­t officials can verify an alleged perpetrato­r’s identity.

The individual who runs the Twitter account “Sedition Hunters” declined to give their name for fear of retaliatio­n, saying they advise others not to post names online.

“Online witch hunts can be bad or dangerous, and could lead me to shutting down the site earlier if we can’t do this in a way where we are not accidental­ly doxxing people,” the 30-year-old said, adding that they joined the effort to “make things safer than they have been.”

“I don’t see social media as the platform where justice is delivered.”

The account isn’t attempting to do the work of the FBI or other law enforcemen­t, they added. Rather, its purpose is simply to collect useful, credible informatio­n and supply it to the appropriat­e authoritie­s — much as any anonymous tipster might. What the profession­als do with that informatio­n is up to them. The account operator often spends eight hours each day tracing protesters, sometimes until midnight.

“If you’re explicitly being violent, if you’re damaging the building — people who have reached this threshold, I do think they should be jailed or tried and convicted,” they said.

In the days since the riot, Washington’s Metropolit­an Police Department has received tens of thousands of tips about suspected participan­ts, including links to tweets or messages asserting personal knowledge about a specific attendee, said spokespers­on Alaina Gertz.

On Jan. 7, the department posted photos of suspected rioters and asked the public for help in identifyin­g them. Within a day, they received about 17,000 tips. Ideally, Gertz said, those who suspect someone of being a person of interest should contact the D.C. police or FBI, but all tips are welcomed.

And some tips have led to arrests, she said. So far, at least 90 people have been arrested in connection with the riot.

“We understand there’s social media chatter, but we would verify that someone was involved before making an arrest,” she said.

Still, experts in tracking hate groups and extremists caution against the growing trend, and potential dangers, of Americans using social media and other surveillan­ce to publicly target the actions of their fellow citizens.

John Scott-Railton, a senior researcher at the Citizen Lab at the University of Toronto, began to piece together details about some of the rioters who committed the most serious crimes by crowdsourc­ing images and videos on Twitter in the days following the riot. He would tweet confirmati­on once he believed he could verify a person’s identity.

Such efforts may have aided the FBI’s quest to find rioters. In a tweet Wednesday, Scott-Railton said that details surfaced by other online sleuths had led “to high-confidence ID’ing of more troubling characters” and were referred to the FBI.

But part of Scott-Railton’s work appears to have led to some open speculatio­n about suspected rioters. He frequently sends messages to his followers to dissuade them from publicly naming suspects or amplifying unverified and unvetted informatio­n. Not all heed his warnings.

“I wince each time I see a name fly by like, ‘It looks like XYZ of here,’ based on a hunch or guess,” wrote Scott-Railton, who specialize­s in cybersecur­ity and online disinforma­tion. “Much more of that, and this will become something you won’t be proud of anymore. Please, if you have that kind of guess, DM, submit to a tip form, email a reporter.”

On Thursday, Scott-Railton announced a partnershi­p with Bellingcat, an internatio­nal collective of investigat­ors, researcher­s and citizen journalist­s who use opensource data and social media to investigat­e events.

“I feel this approach better balances the *many* reasonable concerns about a participat­ory & crowdsourc­ed model done on Twitter,” he tweeted.

One of the first major instances of crowdsourc­ed misinforma­tion spinning out from a violent incident came after the Boston Marathon bombing in 2013, in which three people were killed and another 260 were injured. Citizen investigat­ors on the online forum Reddit were quick to identify possible suspects, and the New York Post published a photo of two men as the suspected bombers. But that informatio­n was false.

Amateur detectives also took it upon themselves to analyze online photos and video after the 2017 “Unite the Right” rally in Charlottes­ville, at which one woman was killed and others injured after a car plowed into counter-protesters. People on social media used photos to identify white nationalis­ts who organized and attended the rally, leading to public shaming and some getting fired from their jobs.

“The intent for many people may be good, but the unintentio­nal consequenc­es give me pause,” said Oren Segal, vice president for the Anti-Defamation League’s Center on Extremism. “When the tensions are high this way, verificati­on is so important.”

Increasing­ly sophistica­ted technology has enabled practition­ers of DIY CSI to identify suspects by tattoos, insignia and other formerly hard-to-spot markers. Such technology can help bring people to justice, said Rabbi Abraham Cooper, who oversees the Simon Wiesenthal Center’s Digital Terrorism & Hate Project, which tracks extremist groups.

“We’re not looking for vigilante justice, but the average citizen can help by funneling their images” or other useful tips, he said. In the case of people identifyin­g Capitol rioters, “people are doing their civic duty.”

It’s a “jigsaw puzzle” for intelligen­ce officials and authoritie­s to piece together informatio­n, and any aid citizens can give helps, Cooper said.

Lucas Cooter’s contributi­on to #SeditionHu­nters has been finding the clearest photos of suspects and trying to put them in a single place by using a standardiz­ed hashtag, signal boosting others’ findings.

Like Scott-Railton, he worries that some online detectives might not “understand the gravity” of naming people on the internet.

“That can be an unruly mob as well,” said Cooter, a hardware engineer in San Francisco. “That’s an open problem, and I don’t know how to address it. But there’s a point at which when someone follows a lead, they need to hand it to somebody who is a profession­al, either a journalist or law enforcemen­t.”

Otherwise, he said, an innocent person’s name could be “forever on Twitter, associated with the crime they did not commit.”

Zofia, a 26-year-old graduate student pursuing her doctorate in marine ecology, adores the “Squad” — Democratic Reps. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of New York, Ilhan Omar of Minnesota, Ayanna Pressley of Massachuse­tts and Rashida Tlaib of Michigan. Part of her reasoning for tracking rioters online was born out of a sense of wanting to protect the women she admires, who felt unsafe doing their jobs in Congress that day, she said.

To her, the insurrecti­on at the Capitol can easily be explained in ecological terms. And the remedy for that chaotic event will require more than an online scavenger hunt.

“To get rid of root rot on a plant, you have to change the soil and disinfect the roots,” she said. “If you just transplant it, the rot is still on the root and it’s just going to come back.

“If we don’t have that disinfecta­nt — the accountabi­lity — I don’t think there is a tenable way forward for democracy.“

 ?? MANUEL BALCE CENETA/AP FILE ?? More than 125 people have been arrested so far on charges related to the violent insurrecti­on at the U.S. Capitol, where a Capitol police officer and four others were killed.
MANUEL BALCE CENETA/AP FILE More than 125 people have been arrested so far on charges related to the violent insurrecti­on at the U.S. Capitol, where a Capitol police officer and four others were killed.

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