The Guardian (USA)

Capitol attack suspect’s ‘I Was There’ shirt helps confirm his role – prosecutor­s

- Richard Luscombe and agencies

If any of the Texas police officers who came to detain Capitol attack suspect Garret Miller were not sure they had the right man, the T-shirt they found him wearing offered something of a clue: it featured a photograph of Donald Trump and the slogan “I Was There, Washington DC, 6 January 2021”.

Prosecutor­s say Miller’s attire on the day of his arrest in Dallas was only part of the self-incriminat­ing evidence he provided to confirm his role in the deadly insurrecti­on incited by Trump’s efforts to overturn his election defeat.

Police say they found weapons, ammunition and tactical gear including night vision goggles, ropes and grappling hooks, plus crossbows and arrows, at Miller’s house.

A succession of social media posts by the unemployed 34-year-old on the day of the attack and its immediate aftermath was also highlighte­d in a federal court filing prosecutor­s hope will persuade a judge not to release Miller on bond before his trial.

On Facebook on 6 January, Miller allegedly posted a selfie from inside the Capitol, prompting another user to write: “Bro you got in?! Nice!”

Miller replied, “Just wanted to incriminat­e myself a little lol,” prosecutor­s said.

In an Instagram post on 10 January, Miller allegedly said of the officer who shot dead a female protester inside the Capitol: “He will swing. I had a rope in my bag that day.”

The prosecutor­s say Miller believed the officer was black and considered him “a prize to be taken”.

“By bringing tactical gear, ropes and potentiall­y, by his own admission, a gun to the Capitol on 6 January 2021, Miller showed that he was not just caught up in the frenzy of the crowd but instead came to DC with the intention of disrupting the democratic process of counting and certifying electoral college votes,” the prosecutor­s wrote.

Miller later threatened to kill Alex

andria Ocasio-Cortez, the New York congresswo­man, and the Capitol police officer who shot the protester.

“Assassinat­e AOC,” Miller replied on Twitter, prosecutor­s allege, after she wrote “Impeach” in her own post about

Trump’s actions.

Miller is among more than 300 people facing federal charges for participat­ing in the attack that claimed five lives, including a Capitol police officer. He was indicted by a grand jury in February on 12 counts, including civil disorder, obstructio­n of an official proceeding and assaulting, resisting or impeding officers.

He denies any role in the violence. According to the court filing, he told his mother in a phone call after his arrest: “I don’t feel that I’ve done anything wrong and now I’m being locked up.”

F Clinton Broden, Miller’s attorney, called for his client’s release, saying he regrets his actions.

“He has no history of violence and he did not engage in any acts of violence in connection with the charged offenses, unlike many others who have previously been released,” Broden wrote.

Miller remains in jail in Oklahoma City, with a trial date yet to be set. He broke his collarbone playing soccer during recreation time, prosecutor­s say, delaying his transfer to Washington.

 ??  ?? A statement of facts document presented to the United States district court in the case against Garret Miller on Monday. Photograph: Jon Elswick/AP
A statement of facts document presented to the United States district court in the case against Garret Miller on Monday. Photograph: Jon Elswick/AP

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