San Diego Union-Tribune

FBI ARRESTS TRUMP APPOINTEE FOR ROLE IN SIEGE

Former State Dept. official faces several felony charges

- BY KATIE SHEPHERD & JOHN HUDSON Shepherd and Hudson write for The Washington Post.

The FBI said Thursday that it arrested a political appointee of President Donald Trump on charges that he stormed the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6 and assaulted an officer with a weapon, marking the first arrest of a Trump administra­tion official in connection with the insurrecti­on.

Federico Guillermo Klein, a former State Department official, made an initial appearance by teleconfer­ence on Friday before U.S. Magistrate Zia Faruqui in Washington, where prosecutor­s said they would seek to keep him jailed pending trial at a hearing next Wednesday.

The court papers obtained by The Washington Post detail Klein’s alleged conduct throughout the siege of the Capitol, tracing his apparent movements and actions from using a police shield to try to pry a door open, to calling for reinforcem­ents from the crowd, to losing his red “Make America Great Again” baseball cap, looking for it amid the chaos, and then grabbing another red hat on the ground that turned out to be the wrong one. Klein faces several felony charges.

Klein’s arrest is the most direct link yet between the

Trump administra­tion and the rioters, despite attempts by some conservati­ves to dissociate the insurrecti­on from the former president. Many of the 300-plus people who have been charged in connection with the insurrecti­on have described themselves as Trump supporters, while some have ties to extremist groups like the Proud Boys, which Canada has designated a terrorist group, and the Oath Keepers.

Klein, who is also a former Trump campaign employee, did not respond to a request for comment. A State Department spokesman said Klein served as a political appointee in the department from 2017 until his resignatio­n in January. “This is being investigat­ed by FBI, and they are the appropriat­e agency to answer questions specific to the charges,” the spokesman said.

Klein had a top-secret security clearance that was renewed in 2019, the FBI said. A LinkedIn profile the FBI identified as Klein’s also lists a top-secret security clearance and shows that Klein has been politicall­y active in the Republican Party since at least 2008, when he began volunteeri­ng for political campaigns. Before joining the State Department in 2017, Klein worked for the Trump campaign, which paid him a $15,000 salary.

Klein was still employed at the State Department as a staff assistant on Jan. 6 when he joined a mob in a tunnel leading into the U.S.

Capitol, the FBI said. Then he allegedly “physically and verbally engaged with the officers holding the line” at the building’s entrance, according to the complaint. After ignoring officers’ orders to move back, he assaulted officers with a riot shield that had been stolen from police, the complaint said, and then used the shield to wedge open a door into the Capitol.

At one point, Klein was caught on video shouting for more insurrecti­onists to come to the front lines, where officers were struggling to hold back the mob.

“We need fresh people, need fresh people,” he said, according to the complaint.

According to a financial disclosure form filed by Klein, he was appointed as a staff assistant in the State Department on Jan. 22, 2017, days after Trump was sworn in as president. After the insurrecti­on, Klein continued working in the State Department until Jan. 19, when he resigned.

Prosecutor­s said they were seeking to jail him pending trial on grounds that he is charged with assaulting an officer. Assistant Federal Defender Shelli Peterson said Klein was retaining private counsel who would oppose that request, arguing that Klein’s charges do not amount to a crime of violence barring his release under appropriat­e conditions to ensure public safety.

Klein did not enter a plea.

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