Los Angeles Times

Judge orders 2 Proud Boys jailed pending trial

Pair are accused of having key roles in planning Jan. 6 attack.

- By Del Quentin Wilber

— A federal judge on Monday ordered two members of the far-right Proud Boys back to jail to be detained pending trial, backing the Justice Department’s most aggressive effort to jail those accused of participat­ing in the Jan. 6 Capitol riot.

U.S. District Judge Timothy Kelly said federal prosecutor­s provided enough evidence to demonstrat­e that Ethan Nordean, 30, and Joseph Biggs, 37, should return to custody because they posed a danger to the public if they continued to remain free. They have been on home confinemen­t since shortly after their arrests in January.

Nordean and Biggs “stand charged with seeking to steal one of the crown jewels of our country, in a sense, by interferin­g with the peaceful transfer of power,” Kelly said from the bench in ordering the men back to jail.

The judge said he believed detaining the men, who have pleaded not guilty to conspiracy and other charges, was the only way to ensure they did not seek to engage in activities that might put the public at risk. “These men have devoted huge portions of their lives to being leaders and planners in the Proud Boys organizati­on and have not expressed regret or remorse for what happened that day. That does not inspire confidence they would comply with an order to sever ties” with the group or stay away from phones and other comWASHING­TON munication devices, Kelly said.

The Proud Boys are considered to be a hate group by the Southern Poverty Law Center. The Anti-Defamation League says the group is representa­tive of “an unconventi­onal strain of American right-wing extremism” and “can be described as violent, nationalis­tic, Islamophob­ic, transphobi­c and misogynist­ic.”

Federal prosecutor­s had argued in hearings and in court papers that they had uncovered new evidence, laid out in a March 10 indictment, that demonstrat­ed Nordean and Biggs played key roles in the Proud Boys’ planning to attack the Capitol. The prosecutor­s also said neither Proud Boy had expressed remorse for the assault, during which four people died and scores of people were injured.

Nordean and Biggs also remain committed to the cause, prosecutor­s argued, and may attempt something similar in the future if they are permitted to have access to communicat­ion devices and to contact other members of their group.

“This was not something that just happened in an instant. This was a planned and coordinate­d effort, and that conduct that took place was a success,” Jason McCullough, assistant U.S. attorney, said at a hearing April 6, arguing there was a likelihood the men would be involved in similar actions in the future.

Defense lawyers countered that Biggs and Nordean should remain free on home confinemen­t. Neither has a criminal history, they have extensive ties to their communitie­s, and they have not violated any terms of their pretrial release since being freed in January after their arrests, the lawyers said.

The attorneys noted that two judges had already ruled they could remain on home confinemen­t pending trial — Nordean in Washington state and Biggs in Florida. Defense attorneys have also attacked the strength of the government’s case, maintainin­g that messages from an encrypted chat group uncovered by federal agents could be read in different ways.

Nordean’s lawyer, Nicholas Smith, tried to convince the judge Monday to permit the Proud Boy to remain at home but order him to stay clear of electronic devices. Kelly said he had considered such a condition but decided it couldn’t be enforced.

Biggs’ attorney, John Daniel Hull, conceded the case was “novel and difficult” and compliment­ed the judge for issuing such a detailed ruling. Neither lawyer indicated at the hearing whether they intended to appeal. Smith did not immediatel­y respond to requests seeking comment, and Hull declined to comment further on the case.

Of more than 400 people arrested in the storming of the Capitol, the Justice Department alleges that about three dozen are members or leaders of the Proud Boys or Oath Keepers, most of whom have been released. The government has argued that such far-right groups extensivel­y planned for the attack and played key roles in leading it .

 ?? Carolyn Kaster Associated Press ?? PROUD BOYS members Joseph Biggs, front left, and Ethan Nordean, with megaphone, walk toward the U.S. Capitol in Washington before the riot Jan. 6.
Carolyn Kaster Associated Press PROUD BOYS members Joseph Biggs, front left, and Ethan Nordean, with megaphone, walk toward the U.S. Capitol in Washington before the riot Jan. 6.

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