JAN. 6 INSURRECTION Mom, son arrested in theft of Pelosi’s laptop
FBI: Residents of Watertown helped thief take computer
A New York mother and son have been charged with theft in aiding the disappearance of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s laptop during the Jan. 6 insurrection.
The FBI on Friday arrested Maryann Mooney-rondon, 55, and her son, Rafael Rondon, 23, of Watertown, New York, in connection with the stolen laptop, according to court documents. Both also face other charges related to the riot at the Capitol.
Rafael Rondon also faces a charge of possession of an unregistered sawed-off shotgun.
Both appeared in federal court Friday in Syracuse and were released pending further proceedings, according to a statement from the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Northern District of New York.
A message left at a listing for Mooney-condon in Watertown was not immediately returned Monday. Attempts to locate Rafael Rondon were not immediately successful.
The Capitol riot was well documented by those who took part. Law enforcement used photos from the social media accounts to search for the suspects.
A tip to the FBI led them to the mother and son, according to a statement by an unnamed FBI special agent.
Mooney-rondon allegedly admitted to being in both the Capitol the day of the riots and Pelosi’s conference room, the document says.
She allegedly provided gloves or a scarf to a man to steal Pelosi’s laptop without leaving fingerprints.
“He asked, he said, ‘Give me’ — I don’t know if it was gloves or a scarf I was wearing — and like I said, he scared me,” the document quotes her as saying.
There was an ethernet connected to the computer, her son told FBI agents. “If I recall, the guy was going to yank it out. I’m like, dude, don’t do that, I mean that’s, I mean just the computer, you can’t pull the cables out, it’ll ruin everything,” Mooneyrondon said, according to the document.
Mooney-rondon then said she believes she saw the man put the computer in his backpack. Her son told investigators that be thinks he might have pushed the computer “in his bag a little bit using a glove ‘cause he didn’t want to get his fingerprints on it,” the document says.
She and her son then went to the Senate Gallery and then left the building when they saw it was overrun with protesters.
Rafael Rondon told officers that he and mother took the metro into Washington on Jan. 6 “because I’m not taking my car into the city which, the Capitol building I’m about to break into,” the FBI agent’s statement contends.