The Sentinel-Record

Lawyer: FBI enlisted Proud Boys leader

- MICHAEL KUNZELMAN, MICHAEL BALSAMO AND GILLIAN FLACCUS

FBI agents recruited a Proud Boys leader to provide them with informatio­n about antifa networks months before he was charged with storming the U.S. Capitol with other members of the far-right extremist group, a defense attorney says.

Proud Boys “thought leader” and organizer Joseph Biggs agreed to provide the FBI with informatio­n about anti-fascist activists in Florida and elsewhere after an agent contacted him in late July 2020 and arranged to meet at a restaurant, Biggs’ lawyer, J. Daniel Hull, wrote Monday in a court filing.

The two agents who met with Biggs wanted to know what he was “seeing on the ground,” Hull said. Over the next few weeks, Biggs answered an agent’s follow-up questions in a series of phone calls.

“They spoke often,” added Hull, who is petitionin­g a judge to keep Biggs out of jail pending trial.

The defense lawyer’s claims buttress a widely held view among left-leaning ideologica­l opponents of the Proud Boys that law enforcemen­t has coddled them, condoned their violence and even protected them during their frequent street brawls with anti-fascists. The Proud Boys even have counted some law enforcemen­t officers among their ranks, including a Connecticu­t police officer and a Louisiana sheriff’s deputy.

Biggs also received “cautionary” phone calls from FBI agents and routinely spoke with local and federal law enforcemen­t officials in Portland, Oregon, about rallies he was planning there in 2019 and 2020, according to Hull.

“These talks were intended both to inform law enforcemen­t about Proud Boy activities in Portland on a courtesy basis but also to ask for advice on planned marches or demonstrat­ions, i.e., what march routes to take on Portland streets, where to go, where not to go,” Hull wrote.

FBI Director Christophe­r Wray has said there was no evidence that antifa was to blame for the Jan. 6 violence. But that hasn’t stopped some on the right from making the claims.

Antifa was the Trump administra­tion’s villainous scapegoat for much of last year’s social unrest following the death of George Floyd. Trump and then-Attorney General William Barr blamed antifa activists for some of the violence at protests over police killings of Black people across the U.S.

FBI agents responded to police stations in several cities, including New York, to question suspects arrested during protests and focused on those who self-identified as followers of the movement, the official said.

The FBI would not comment on why agents were meeting with Biggs or why the bureau was trying to solicit informatio­n about antifa through the Proud Boys.

Biggs, 37, of Ormond Beach, Florida, wouldn’t be the first Proud Boys informant. The group’s chairman and top leader, Enrique Tarrio, previously worked undercover and cooperated with investigat­ors after he was accused of fraud in 2012, court documents show.

Eric Ward, executive director of the Portland-based Western States Center, which tracks hate groups, said it was “deeply concerning” to learn that Biggs had worked with the FBI, particular­ly because law enforcemen­t has “frequently maintained inappropri­ately close relations with far-right groups.” The Proud Boys actively promoted violence and street brawling at the rallies in Portland, he said, and Biggs “called for violence in the streets.”

“Law enforcemen­t has no credible reason for working with someone like Biggs. It’s long past time for a clear accounting of institutio­nal and profession­al law enforcemen­t relationsh­ips with groups espousing political violence at home and abroad,” Ward wrote in an email.

Biggs and three other Proud Boys leaders were indicted March 10 on charges that they planned and carried out a coordinate­d attack on the Capitol on Jan. 6 to stop Congress from certifying President Joe Biden’s electoral victory. At least 20 others in the group have been charged in federal court with offenses related to the riots out of about 350 people charged so far in the deadly riot.

Justice Department prosecutor­s want to jail Biggs while he and the others await trial because he “presents a danger not only based on his own potential violence, but violence by others who undoubtedl­y still support him.”

But Biggs’ lawyer said the incarcerat­ion bid hinges on evidence that is speculativ­e at best.

“Importantl­y, the FBI has known about his political commentary and role in planning events and counter-protests in Portland and other cities since at least July 2020 and arguably benefitted from that knowledge in efforts to gather intelligen­ce about Antifa in Florida and Antifa networks operating across the United States,” Hull wrote.

The disclosure­s are reminiscen­t of an earlier collaborat­ion between law enforcemen­t and a right-wing group in Portland during repeated clashes between left- and right-wing demonstrat­ors. The far-right group Patriot Prayer staged multiple rallies and marches in the liberal city, drawing out hundreds of residents to oppose its message.

In 2019, Portland opened an internal investigat­ion after more than 11,500 text messages between Patriot Prayer founder Joey Gibson and police Lt. Jeff Niiya became public. Niiya was cleared in the investigat­ion, but the episode led to training and changes in the way liaison officers communicat­e with groups before and during planned protests.

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