Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Capitol insurrecti­on was not by antifa

- Eric Litke Milwaukee Journal Sentinel USA TODAY NETWORK – WISCONSIN

In the wake of a violent assault on the U.S. Capitol that left four protesters and a Capitol Police officer dead, many on the far-right are seeking to minimize the violence and deflect blame from an attack intended to disrupt the finalizing of Democrat Joe Biden’s presidenti­al victory.

One persistent claim is that bad actors from the far-left impersonat­ed supporters of President Donald Trump and are actually responsibl­e for the violence.

Let’s be clear — this is completely fabricated. Neverthele­ss, this line of thought has pervaded social media, amplified by prominent voices such as Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton and U.S. Rep. Mo Brooks, R-Alabama. PolitiFact National rated claims from both Pants on Fire.

Here, we add a would-be candidate for Wisconsin governor to that list.

Jonathan Wichmann, who has accumulate­d 27,000 followers on a Facebook page describing him as a 2022 gubernator­ial candidate, posted a YouTube video on Friday with the following descriptio­n:

“A meeting between DC police and rioters / Antifa beforehand. If you don’t know that the DC looting was staged think again.”

Antifa is short for anti-fascist, a term often used to describe a loose collection of activists who rally against fascism and far-right groups.

The accompanyi­ng 18-second video shows one man taking a selfie with what appears to be a Capitol Police officer while someone says, “Hey Cap’” twice. It takes place inside the U.S. Capitol.

But Wichmann’s claim flies in the face of a litany of evidence without presenting any reasonable evidence itself.

Wichmann’s claim and video

Wichmann did not respond to an array of messages seeking a defense of his claim.

He posted the video on a littleview­ed YouTube channel but also linked

to it on his more highly trafficked Facebook page.

(Wichmann himself linked to the YouTube video during a discussion of an NPR story on his Facebook page. He said an NPR story on the protesttur­ned-riot “has been edited multiple times to say different things throughout the day,” implying there was something underhande­d at play. Of course, this reflects a fundamenta­l misunderst­anding of how news reporting works — the situation began as a protest and turned into a historical­ly unpreceden­ted attack on the seat of U.S. government. So yes, news reports from essentiall­y everywhere were updated as that story developed.)

The first logical hurdle Wichmann fails to clear is that the video itself doesn’t remotely prove his assertion, which was made in the video descriptio­n.

For one, Wichmann titles his video, “A meeting between DC police and rioters / Antifa beforehand.” But a man who shared that video on Twitter told PolitiFact National the interactio­n happened after police started moving the crowd out of the building.

The video appears to show members of the pro-Trump group acting friendly with police. This is not the only video of its kind, as others circulated widely on social media showed officers allowing the group past barriers. It’s part of a law enforcemen­t response that has been highly criticized and led to the resignatio­n

of the U.S. Capitol Police chief.

But a poor response from police is a far cry from proving the protesters themselves are not who they purport to be.

The clip used by Wichmann itself is a second-hand version of a livestream from online personalit­y Tim Gionet, known by the nickname Baked Alaska, who is described by the Southern Poverty Law Center as a white nationalis­t. The original stream — taken while Gionet stormed the Capitol — has been removed, as it and others are now being used to help identify the people who participat­ed.

But Wichmann takes a ridiculous logical leap in interpreti­ng one apparently friendly interactio­n with police as proof the people in the Capitol weren’t actually Trump supporters.

Especially when a mountain of evidence says otherwise.

What we know about the Capitol assaulters

The mob that broke windows inside and outside the Capitol and violently pushed past police moved to the building after a rally earlier that morning where Trump spoke to the group.

Here are a few of the many reasons the antifa claims don’t hold water.

Paxton’s antifa claim cited two sources: a screenshot of a tweet by right-wing journalist Paul Sperry and a screenshot of a Washington Times article with the headline, "Facial recognitio­n firm claims Antifa infiltrated Trump protesters who stormed Capitol."

The tweet, claiming a busload of “antifa thugs” had been dropped off at the Capitol, has since been deleted and remains completely unsubstant­iated. The newspaper has since retracted the report, and the company it cited as a source, XRVision, has said its software identified two members of a Neo-Nazi organizati­on and a Q-Anon supporter, not members of antifa.

Meanwhile, many individual­s seen in news and social media footage have been identified, and have lengthy public histories of backing Trump, QAnon and other far-right causes.

That includes the bare-chested man with face paint and horns, identified by the Arizona Republic as Jake Angeli, “a QAnon supporter who has been a fixture at Arizona right-wing political rallies over the past year.” And Richard Barnett, who was pictured with his feet on the desk of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, is a Trump supporter and gun rights advocate who posted recently he was prepared for a violent death.

A growing number of people have lost their jobs or been arrested after being identified by law enforcemen­t and social media sleuths. We know the group outside the Capitol included several Republican state legislator­s, including newly elected West Virginia lawmaker Derrick Evans, who shared a livestream video in which he charged through a door in the interior of the Capitol building. He was criminally chargedFri­day.

An array of other online claims have asserted the Capitol assault was a “false flag” operation — a supposed covert operation designed to deflect blame. PolitiFact rated those False, noting, “To dismiss the insurrecti­on as a false flag is to dismiss the testimony of dozens and dozens of lawmakers, government employees and journalist­s who were at the Capitol that day to cover Congress certifying the victory of President-elect Joe Biden.”

And of course, Trump himself identified the mob as his own supporters in a video posted to Twitter amid the Capitol incident, where he asked them to disperse peacefully, adding, "We love you. You’re very special."

Our ruling

Wichmann said “the DC looting was staged” by antifa.

Wichmann presents no evidence to back this claim online or in response to our requests. This is a pure fiction that contradict­s an array of easily accessible informatio­n.

We rate this claim Pants on Fire.

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