The Reporter (Vacaville)

Military veteran convicted of obstructio­n in Capitol riot

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WASHINGTON >> A military veteran accused of telling an undercover FBI agent about a plan to “wipe out” the nation's Jewish population was convicted on Tuesday of storming the U.S. Capitol to stop Congress from certifying President Joe Biden's 2020 electoral victory.

A federal judge heard trial testimony without a jury before convicting

Virginia resident Hatchet Speed, a former U.S. Naval reservist who was assigned to an agency that operates spy satellites. U.S. District Judge Trevor McFadden is scheduled to sentence Speed on May 8 for his role in a mob's attack on the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021.

McFadden convicted Speed of all five charges in his indictment, including a felony count of obstructin­g an official proceeding, the Jan. 6 joint session of

Congress for certifying the Electoral College vote. The judge also convicted Speed of four misdemeano­rs.

The FBI recorded Speed's conversati­ons with the undercover agent more than a year after the riot. Speed told the agent that he marched to the Capitol with members of the farright Proud Boys extremist group, authoritie­s said.

Speed also spewed antisemiti­c rhetoric linked to his dislike for government, according to prosecutor­s. They argued that Speed's hateful ideology helps explain why he joined the Capitol attack.

Speed was “deeply worried about a Biden presidency” and believed false claims that the 2020 presidenti­al election had been stolen from Donald Trump, the Republican incumbent, prosecutor­s wrote in a court filing. They said Speed expressed his admiration for Adolf Hitler and told the undercover agent that he believes Jewish people control Biden, a Democrat.

“Speed saw the Jews as `everywhere,' fighting to destroy Christians, and he was not willing to sit by,” prosecutor­s wrote.

McFadden said the limited trial testimony about Speed's antisemiti­sm wasn't a factor in his verdict. But the judge cited statements that Speed made about Jan. 6 in support of his conviction on the obstructio­n charge.

“His own words show the defendant's actions were knowing and willful,” the judge said.

Speed was arrested in June 2022 on riot-related misdemeano­r charges. A grand jury later indicted him on the felony obstructio­n charge.

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