San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

TWO PROUD BOYS FACE FEDERAL CONSPIRACY CHARGES

Pair face 11 new counts; charges are most serious in Capitol riot to date

- THE NEW YORK TIMES

Prosecutor­s investigat­ing the violent riot at the Capitol this month announced their first federal conspiracy charges against the Proud Boys on Friday night, accusing two members of the far-right nationalis­t group of working together to obstruct and interfere with law enforcemen­t officers protecting Congress during the final certificat­ion of the presidenti­al election.

In an indictment filed in federal court in Washington, prosecutor­s charged the two Proud Boys, Dominic Pezzola, of Rochester, N.Y., and William Pepe, of Beacon, N.Y., with 11 counts, including conspiracy, assaulting an officer and civil disorder. Both Pezzola, a former boxer and Marine, and Pepe, an employee of the Metropolit­an Transporta­tion Authority, were already facing lesser charges connected to the Capitol attack, which followed a Jan. 6 rally in support of former President Donald Trump.

While more than 170 people have been charged in the deadly assault on the Capitol, most have been accused of relatively minor crimes such as disorderly conduct and unlawful entry. The only other serious conspiracy charges in the inquiry have been brought against three members of the militia group the Oath Keepers, who are accused of organizing since a week after the November election to stop the certificat­ion of the vote.

But unlike the Oath Keepers indictment, the one brought against Pezzola, 43, and Pepe, 31, describes only a two-person conspiracy that lasted only through the day of the rally when, it notes, a large group of Proud Boys traveled to Washington and gathered near the Capitol grounds.

A Proud Boys “organizer” led the group — with Pezzola and Pepe among them — in a series of chants, including, “We love Trump,” before moving on to the Capitol, the indictment says.

Earlier this month, prosecutor­s described a virtually identical scene in court papers charging Joseph Biggs, a high-ranking leader of the Proud Boys, with steering a crew of about 100 Proud Boys toward the Capitol. Another organizer, Ethan Nordean, helped Biggs lead the crowd, the court papers said, but has not been charged.

The Proud Boys, a self-described “western chauvinist” group that has a long history of bloody street fights with left-wing activists described as antifa, have drawn the attention of investigat­ors because they are one of the extremist outfits that had a large presence on Capitol Hill during the assault. The FBI has started executing search warrants against the group, including one from last week that permitted the collection of numerous electronic devices.

Investigat­ors have made a priority of exploring whether the attack was planned in advance by groups like the Proud Boys. This past week, Michael Sherwin, the U.S. attorney in Washington, said that prosecutor­s were focused on bringing “more complicate­d conspiracy cases related to possible coordinati­on among militia groups” and “individual­s from different states that had a plan to travel” to Washington before Jan. 6.

The new Proud Boys indictment offers no evidence that members of the group worked in advance to plot the Capitol assault and describes only vague links between its two defendants, Pezzola and Pepe. Still, the indictment notes that the men worked with other individual­s — both “known and unknown” — leaving open the possibilit­y that further charges could be filed.

Pezzola, who works as a laborer laying tile, has been a focus of the sprawling investigat­ion into the Capitol attack almost from the moment it began.

Court papers released Friday morning said that he was in the first wave of rioters to enter the building, shattering a window with a plastic police shield. When FBI agents searched Pezzola’s home near Rochester after the riot, prosecutor­s said, they found a thumb drive with several PDF files, some suggesting he had been studying bomb-making techniques.

The prior charges against Pepe, a Metro-north Railroad worker, were only scantly described. In a criminal complaint issued Jan. 11, prosecutor­s said that he had used a day of sick leave to attend a “Stop the Steal” protest in Washington and was subsequent­ly photograph­ed inside the Capitol. At a hearing this past week, prosecutor­s made a cryptic reference to an ongoing investigat­ion involving Pepe but never fully explained what it was at the time.

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