Houston Chronicle

No signs of antifa in riot at Capitol

- By Brandon Mulder

The claim: “Those who stormed the Capitol yesterday were not Trump supporters. They have been confirmed to be antifa.” — Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton.

The day after a mob carrying pro-Trump flags and signs breached the nation’s Capitol, the state’s top law enforcemen­t officer advanced a conspiracy theory that left-wing activists were to blame. Paxton was in Washington on Wednesday, when he spoke at the “Save America” rally outside the White House.

PolitiFact rating: Pants on Fire! Paxton based his claim on two sources — a deleted tweet and a retracted Washington Times article. Beyond those dubious sources, there’s no evidence showing that those who stormed the Capitol were antifa.

Discussion

The retracted Washington Times article carried the headline, “Facial recognitio­n firm claims antifa infiltrate­d Trump protesters who stormed Capitol.”

Paxton’s post Thursday on Facebook cited that article, as well as a tweet by right-wing journalist Paul Sperry.

“BREAKING: Former F.B.I. agent on the ground at U.S. Capitol just texted me and confirmed that at least 1 ‘bus load’ of Antifa thugs infiltrate­d peaceful demonstrat­ors as part of a false Trump flag ops,” Sperry’s tweet reads.

Sperry’s tweet has since been deleted. Sperry, a former Washington bureau chief for Investor’s Business Daily, did not respond to questions sent to him via email.

Paxton’s second source alleging that Wednesday’s mob is “confirmed to be antifa,” the Washington Times article, was published about 8:15 p.m. Wednesday by news and opinion writer Rowan Scarboroug­h. The story refers to an unnamed “retired military officer” who told the Times “that the firm XRVision used its software to do facial recognitio­n of protesters and matched two Philadelph­ia antifa members to two men inside the Senate.”

The newspaper has since retracted the report, but not before Rep. Matt Gaetz, R-Fla., cited it later that day on the House floor, saying that “some of the people who breached the Capitol today were not Trump supporters, they were masqueradi­ng as Trump supporters and were in fact members of the violent terrorist group antifa.”

XRVision, a facial recognitio­n technology company based in Singapore, issued a statement to PolitiFact and BuzzFeed News on Thursday morning saying that the company sent the Washington Times a cease and desist letter asking it to retract the story and issue an apology. XRVision’s software identified two

members of a neo-Nazi organizati­on and a Q-Anon supporter, not members of antifa. The company said it distribute­d that imagery to a handful of individual­s for private consumptio­n only.

The company said it does not know the identity of the “retired military officer” who gave the Washington Times the informatio­n it based its report on.

“XRVision takes pride in its technology’s precision and deems the Washington Times publicatio­n as outright false, misleading, and defamatory,” the company said in its statement.

The Times issued a correction to the story around 5:30 p.m. Thursday after an inquiry from PolitiFact, saying that “The Washington Times erroneousl­y reported late Wednesday that facial recognitio­n technology backed up that speculatio­n and identified two antifa members. In fact, XRVision has not identified any members of that far-left movement as being part of the attack.”

Paxton did not respond to a request for comment.

As Wednesday’s events turned chaotic, Trump himself identified the mob as his own supporters in a video posted to Twitter, where he asked them to disperse peacefully, adding, “We love you. You’re very special.”

One of the rioters identified in multiple photograph­s, Jake Angeli, also known as the “Q Shaman,” easily spotted in his horned fur cap, rebuffed allegation­s that he was a masqueradi­ng member of antifa.

“I am not antifa or (Black Lives Matter). I am a Qanon & digital soldier,” Angeli posted to Twitter.

Others recorded videos from inside the Capitol, identifyin­g themselves as patriots, including Jenny Cudd, a former Midland mayoral candidate who said she broke into House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s office.

She told the Midland Reporter-Telegram, without offering evidence, that antifa activists broke through Capitol barriers and assaulted police officers before she arrived.

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