Some at Capitol riot had white supremacy group ties
The claim: “There's no evidence that white supremacists were responsible for what happened on Jan. 6. That's a lie.” — Tucker Carlson, Fox News host.
During the segment, Carlson, whose prime-time show is among the most-watched cable news programs, interviewed the author of a blog post that argued the riot did not amount to an armed insurrection. Politifact previously rated that claim Pants on Fire.
Politifact rating: False. Law enforcement officials said the the attack involved extremist and white supremacist groups. Not all of the rioters at the Capitol were extremists or white supremacists, but several people with known ties to white supremacist groups were involved, including some people now facing conspiracy charges.
Discussion
Carlson was responding to attorney general nominee Merrick Garland's pledge at his confirmation hearing to supervise the prosecution of “white supremacists and others” involved in the riot.
Experts on extremism have described white supremacists as a top domestic terrorist threat, and so has FBI director Christopher Wray. In 2019, Carlson called white supremacy a hoax.
It's difficult to say how responsible any one person or group was for what happened. In addition to public records and documentary evidence showing some rioters were aligned with white supremacist groups, many symbols of white supremacy were displayed during the insurrection.
“White supremacists and rebranded alt-right rioters were assuredly there, but there was also a wide variety of other insurrectionists present who share a set of unifying grievances with hardened bigots, who do not necessarily buy into fullblown white supremacy,” said Brian Levin, director of the Center for the Study of Hate &
Extremism at California State University, San Bernardino.
On Feb. 23, in a Senate hearing on the Capitol’s security failures, Sen. Amy Klobuchar, D-minn., asked the acting D.C. police chief, the former Capitol Police chief and the former House and Senate sergeants-at-arms if the attack “involved white supremacist and extremist groups.”
All the officials replied: “Yes.”
Fox News did not respond to a request for comment.
Carlson’s claim came hours after Capitol Police officer Harry Dunn described being repeatedly called a racial slur while defending the complex.
Substantial evidence shows extremist groups, including people who have publicly expressed support for white supremacist ideals, were among those in the crowd.
The New York Times reported Feb. 21 that while most of the rioters were supporters of former President Donald Trump, members of right-wing extremist groups played an outsize role in the riot and were charged with some of the most serious crimes, including conspiracy charges, which indicate a level of planning and coordination.
Of the more than 230 people charged so far, 31 were known to have ties to a militant extremist group, the Times found. That is consistent with what Oren Segal, the vice president of the Anti-defamation League’s Center on Extremism, told Politifact.
“The emerging snapshot of the insurrectionists shows a range of rightwing extremists united by their fury with the perceived large-scale betrayal by ‘unprincipled’ legislators,” Segal said.
Extremist figures at the
Capitol included members of the Proud Boys, a farright organization that celebrates Western culture and male superiority. The group gained notoriety after Trump said in a debate that its members should “stand back and stand by.”
The group has rejected claims that it promotes white supremacy. But Michael Jensen, a senior researcher with the National Consortium for the Study of Terrorism and Responses to Terrorism at the University of Maryland, said some members have known ties to other white supremacist groups or have publicly expressed white supremacist views.
A Wall Street Journal video investigation found that Proud Boys members were “at the forefront” of many of the key moments during the Jan. 6 siege.
Other figures at the riot had explicit white supremacist ties. Some were associated, for example, with the Groypers, a white supremacist group defined by a loose network of people who support the far-right activist and podcaster Nick Fuentes, or the Nationalist Socialist Club, a neo-nazi group, Segal said. Others, such as farright media personality Tim Gionet, or Baked Alaska, have expressed white supremacist views but are unaffiliated with any specific group.
The ADL identified 212 of what it believes were about 800 people who breached the Capitol, Segal said. Among those identified, Segal said the ADL has counted 17 Proud Boys, six people associated with an anti-government militant group known as the Oath Keepers, and 10 people with ties to the Groypers or other white supremacist groups.
“They were certainly present at the Capitol on Jan. 6, and several participated in storming the building,” Jensen said, pointing to people like Gionet and Bryan Betancur, a self-professed white supremacist who was seen wearing a Proud Boys shirt and posing with a Confederate flag.
The presence of white supremacists was also marked by prominently displayed symbols, including some that are “overtly racist” and others that are coded or co-opted but resonate among followers of far-right extremist groups, said Levin.
One man, Robert Packer, was seen in a “Camp Auschwitz” T-shirt, a reference to a complex of concentration camps used during the Holocaust. Others waved Confederate flags, flashed “white power” symbols, showcased “Pepe the frog” imagery and more, Levin said.
Rioters also erected a hanging gallows, which Levin said is a symbol for white supremacists and other alt-right figures signaling a day when “government leaders and minorities are hanged.”