Los Angeles Times

Capitol riot inquiry expands

Hundreds expected to face felony charges tied to sedition, say federal authoritie­s.

- By David Lauter

WASHINGTON — Federal prosecutor­s have opened a broad investigat­ion of possible sedition and conspiracy in connection with last week’s attack on the U. S. Capitol, officials said Tuesday in their f irst public briefing on the status of the case.

FBI investigat­ors so far have opened more than 170 individual case f iles and charged more than 70 people, and “the numbers are going to geometrica­lly increase,” said Michael Sherwin, the acting U. S. attorney in Washington. He likened the effort to the sort of inquiry that law enforcemen­t officials would conduct after an attack by foreign terrorists.

The number of people charged will probably “grow into the hundreds,” Sherwin said. Although the initial charges against most suspects have been misdemeano­rs, “this is only the beginning,” intended to identify suspects for further investigat­ion, he said.

“We’re looking at significan­t felony cases tied to sedition and conspiracy” that could carry prison terms of up to 20 years, he

added.

“You will be charged, and you will be found,” he said, in a warning aimed at those who took part in the Jan. 6 riot, which grew out of a rally of Trump supporters protesting President- elect Joe Biden’s election.

Until Tuesday’s news conference, officials had released little informatio­n to the public about the rapidly expanding investigat­ion — a sharp departure from normal practice in which the Justice Department typically briefs the public frequently on the status of major cases. The Justice Department’s top officials, including acting Atty. Gen. Jeffrey Rosen and FBI Director Christophe­r A. Wray, have released written statements but have not made public appearance­s since the riot.

The news conference comes amid mounting concern about additional attacks in the days leading up to Biden’s swearing- in next week. The FBI on Monday warned of possible armed protests against Biden’s inaugurati­on in all 50 state capitals.

House members received a memo Monday evening laying out new procedures, including heightened security for them at airports, where several have been harassed in recent days. The memo also pointedly reminded members that they can use their office funds for certain additional security measures.

“I never thought I’d see a memo that said we could

purchase bulletproo­f vests,” said Rep. Ted Lieu ( D- Torrance). “But that’s what it said. That’s what Donald Trump has now caused.”

Rep. Lou Correa ( DSanta Ana) was surrounded at a Washington- area airport the morning after the riot in a confrontat­ion caught on video. Several people shouted and cursed at him, including one man who acknowledg­ed he didn’t know which member of Congress he was.

“I thought it was a certainty I was going to get physically attacked — a punch or kick or something — but I thought it was some

thing that was going to happen,” Correa said. “We try very hard to be accessible, and I’m going to continue to be accessible — a little more prepared. I always am, but we’ve got to step it up.”

On Tuesday, even members of Congress were required to pass through magnetomet­ers before entering the House chamber.

Sherwin and Steven D’Antuono, the assistant director of the FBI’s Washington field office, defended the bureau’s handling of intelligen­ce before the riot, which included threats of violence. D’Antuono said the intelligen­ce had been passed

along to other law enforcemen­t agencies but downplayed its significan­ce.

They also emphasized the scope of the case.

“We have literally thousands of potential witnesses,” Sherwin said, and as more informatio­n comes out, the public is “going to be shocked with some of the egregious conduct” that took place during the riot.

The U. S. attorney’s office here, which is heading the nationwide investigat­ion, has assembled a “strike force” of prosecutor­s to look at sedition charges, Sherwin said, as well as a second group to focus on attacks by rioters against reporters and photograph­ers outside the Capitol.

In addition to interviewi­ng witnesses and scrutinizi­ng more than 100,000 pieces of video, photograph­s and other evidence submitted by the public, investigat­ors would examine the financial, communicat­ions and travel records of those involved to determine what level of planning went into the attack, he said.

The case is “not going to be solved within the coming months,” he said. “Everyone is in for the long haul.”

So far, the two officials indicated, investigat­ors have not identified suspects in two of the highest- profile incidents in the attack — the killing of Capitol Police Officer Brian D. Sicknick and the planting of two pipe bombs outside the headquarte­rs of the Democratic and Republican national committees, both of which are located on Capitol Hill.

The bombs were “real devices” with timers and explosives, Sherwin said, adding that investigat­ors are looking at whether they were planted as part of a “diversiona­ry tactic” to draw police away from the attack on the Capitol.

D’Antuono confirmed a report first published by the Washington Post that the FBI’s Norfolk, Va., office had seen online message traffic the day before the riot in which extremists talked explicitly of committing violent acts at the Capitol.

One message declared that “Congress needs to hear glass breaking, doors being kicked in, and blood from their BLM and Pantifa slave soldiers being spilled. Get violent. Stop calling this a march, or rally, or a protest. Go there ready for war.”

The FBI shared that informatio­n with other law enforcemen­t agencies in advance of the Jan. 6 events, D’Antuono said, but did not say if the bureau had made an effort to f lag the informatio­n to senior officials or ensure that the Capitol Police force was aware of the potential threat.

In advance of the rally, the FBI had “developed some intelligen­ce” about specific people who might be planning violent acts, he said. That led to the arrest two days before the rally of Henry “Enrique” Tarrio, a leader of the Proud Boys, an extremist group with a long history of violence.

But investigat­ors need to distinguis­h between “keyboard bravado” and threats of “real harm,” he added, and in the case of the messages seen by the Norfolk office, the bureau “had no indication” that they were tied to a specific threat.

Congressio­nal leaders have vowed to investigat­e why the Capitol Police were so unprepared for the attack. The sergeants at arms of both the House and Senate — the two officials who oversee security for the Capitol — as well as the chief of the Capitol Police have all resigned.

 ?? Kent Nishimura Los Angeles Times ?? PEOPLE WALK on the National Mall with the Washington Monument illuminate­d in the evening sky, nearly a week after a mob breached the security of the nation's Capitol. An impeachmen­t vote is set for Wednesday.
Kent Nishimura Los Angeles Times PEOPLE WALK on the National Mall with the Washington Monument illuminate­d in the evening sky, nearly a week after a mob breached the security of the nation's Capitol. An impeachmen­t vote is set for Wednesday.
 ?? Chip Somodevill­a Getty I mages ?? U. S. CAPITOL POLICE check Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene ( R- Ga.) after she set off a metal detector.
Chip Somodevill­a Getty I mages U. S. CAPITOL POLICE check Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene ( R- Ga.) after she set off a metal detector.
 ?? Manuel Balce Ceneta Associated Press ?? FEDERAL AGENTS have arrested Aaron Mostofsky, right, the son of a New York City judge, who was part of the mob that stormed the U. S. Capitol on Jan. 6.
Manuel Balce Ceneta Associated Press FEDERAL AGENTS have arrested Aaron Mostofsky, right, the son of a New York City judge, who was part of the mob that stormed the U. S. Capitol on Jan. 6.

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