Enterprise-Record (Chico)

Feds focus on organized extremists in siege probe

- By Alanna Durkin Richer and Michael Kunzelman

As members of the Oath Keepers paramilita­ry group shouldered their way through the mob and up the steps to the U.S. Capitol, their plans for Jan. 6 were clear, authoritie­s say. “Arrest this assembly, we have probable cause for acts of treason, election fraud,” someone commanded over an encrypted messaging app some extremists used to communicat­e during the siege.

A little while earlier, Proud Boys carrying twoway radios and wearing earpieces spread out and tried to blend in with the crowd as they invaded the Capitol led by a man assigned “war powers” to oversee the group’s attack, prosecutor­s say.

These two extremist groups that traveled to Washington along with thousands of other Trump supporters weren’t whipped into an impulsive frenzy by President Donald Trump that day, officials say. They’d been laying attack plans. And their internal communicat­ions and other evidence emerging in court papers and in hearings show how authoritie­s are trying to build a case that small cells hidden within the masses mounted an organized, military-style assault on the heart of American democracy.

“This was not simply a march. This was an incredible attack on our institutio­ns of government,” Assistant U.S. Attorney Jason McCullough said during a recent hearing.

The Proud Boys and Oath Keepers make up a fraction of the more than 300 Trump supporters charged so far in the siege that led to Trump’s second impeachmen­t and resulted in the deaths of five people, including a police officer. But several of their leaders, members and associates have become the central targets of the Justice Department’s sprawling investigat­ion.

It could mean more serious criminal charges for some rioters. On the other hand, mounting evidence of advance planning could also fuel Trump’s and his supporters’ claims that the Republican former president did not incite the riot and therefore should not be liable for it.

Defense attorneys have accused prosecutor­s of distorting their clients’ words and actions to falsely portray the attack as a premeditat­ed, orchestrat­ed insurrecti­on instead of a spontaneou­s outpouring of election-fueled rage to stop Congress’ certificat­ion of Trump’s defeat by Democrat Joe Biden.

 ?? CAROLYN KASTER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Proud Boy members Joseph Biggs, left, and Ethan Nordean, right with a megaphone, walk toward the U.S. Capitol in Washington in support of President Donald Trump on Jan. 6.
CAROLYN KASTER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Proud Boy members Joseph Biggs, left, and Ethan Nordean, right with a megaphone, walk toward the U.S. Capitol in Washington in support of President Donald Trump on Jan. 6.

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