Dayton Daily News

FBI finds contact between Trump associate and Proud Boys member

- Katie Benner, Alan Feuer and Adam Goldman NEW YORK TIMES

WASHINGTON — A member of the far-right nationalis­t Proud Boys was in communicat­ion with a person associated with the White House in the days just before the Jan. 6 assault on the Capitol, according to a law enforcemen­t official briefed on the investigat­ion.

Location, cellular and call record data revealed a call tying a Proud Boys member to the Trump White House, the official said. The FBI has not determined what they discussed, and the official would not reveal the names of either party.

The connection revealed by the communicat­ions data comes as the FBI intensifie­s its investigat­ion of contacts among far-right extremists, Trump White House associates and conservati­ve members of Congress in the days before the attack.

The same data has revealed no evidence of communicat­ions between the rioters and members of Congress during the deadly attack, the official said. That undercuts Democratic allegation­s that some Republican lawmakers were active participan­ts that day.

Separately, Enrique Tarrio, a leader of the far-right nationalis­t Proud Boys, told The New York Times on Friday that he called Roger Stone, a close associate of former President Donald Trump’s, while at a protest in front of the home of Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla. During the protest, which occurred in the days before the Capitol assault, he put Stone on speaker phone to address the gathering.

A law enforcemen­t official said it was not Tarrio’s communicat­ion with Stone that was being scrutinize­d, and that the call made in front of Rubio’s home was a different matter. That two members of the group were in communicat­ion with people associated with the White House underscore­s the access that violent extremist groups like the Proud Boys had to the White House and to people close to the former president.

Stone denied “any involvemen­t or knowledge of the attack” in a statement last month to the Times.

Tarrio was arrested in Washington on Jan. 4 on charges of destructio­n of property for his role in the burning of a Black Lives Matter banner that had been torn from a historic Black church during a protest in Washington in December. He was asked to leave the city, and was not present when the Capitol was attacked. His case is pending.

The Justice Department has charged more than a dozen members of the Proud Boys with crimes related to the attack, including conspiracy to obstruct the final certificat­ion of President Joe Biden’s electoral victory and to attack law enforcemen­t.

In court papers, federal prosecutor­s have said groups of Proud Boys also coordinate­d travel to Washington and shared lodging near the city, with the intent of disrupting Congress and advancing Trump’s efforts to unlawfully maintain his grip on the presidency.

The communicat­ion between the person associated with the White House and the member of the Proud Boys was discovered in part through data that the FBI obtained from technology and telecommun­ications companies immediatel­y after the assault.

Court documents show FBI warrants for a list of all the phones associated with the cell towers serving the Capitol, and that it received informatio­n from the major cellphone carriers on the numbers called by everyone on the Capitol’s cell towers during the riot, three officials familiar with the investigat­ion said.

The FBI also obtained a “geofence” warrant for all the Android devices that Google recorded within the building during the assault, the officials said. A geofence warrant legally gives law enforcemen­t a list of mobile devices that are able to be identified in a particular geographic area. Jill Sanborn, the head of counterter­rorism at the FBI, testified before a Senate panel Wednesday that all the data the FBI had gathered in its investigat­ion into the riot was obtained legally.

Although investigat­ors have found no contact between rioters and members of Congress, those records have shown evidence of communicat­ions between far-right extremists and lawmakers planning to appear at the rally

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 ??  ?? A member of the Proud Boys communicat­ed with a Donald Trump associate days before the Jan. 6 assault on the Capitol, a law enforcemen­t official says.
A member of the Proud Boys communicat­ed with a Donald Trump associate days before the Jan. 6 assault on the Capitol, a law enforcemen­t official says.

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