Houston Chronicle

» Officers, Olympian among new arrests.

- By Spencer S. Hsu, Rachel Weiner and Hannah Knowles

WASHINGTON — Federal authoritie­s announced several new charges Wednesday against people accused of involvemen­t in last week’s rioting at the Capitol, including a man said to have worn a pro-Nazi sweatshirt, a five-time Olympic medalist and two police officers from southwest Virginia.

Many of the those charged in the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia on Wednesday face misdemeano­rs and were released on their own recognizan­ce, with prosecutor­s asking only that they be temporaril­y barred from Washington.

“Things that are planned to happen in D.C. perhaps this coming week … there is obviously a concern there,” acting U.S. Attorney Daniel Bubar said in court of asking defendants to stay away from the region.

But prosecutor­s aim to hold a man accused of threatenin­g both House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, DCalif., and D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser, a Democrat.

Among those arrested and released Wednesday were Thomas Robertson, 47, and Jacob Fracker, 29, of Rocky Mount, Va., both officers with the Rocky Mount Police Department. They’ve been placed on administra­tive leave.

An arrest affidavit alleges the FBI had informatio­n that Robertson and Fracker were photograph­ed in the Capitol between 2 and 8 p.m. Jan. 6 making an obscene statement.

Robertson was quoted on social media saying: “CNN and the Left are just mad because we actually attacked the government who is the problem and not some random small business. … The right IN ONE DAY took the … U.S. Capitol. Keep poking us.”

According to the affidavit by Capitol Police Special Agent Vincent Veloz, a now-deleted Facebook post by Fracker was captioned: “Lol to anyone who’s possibly concerned about the picture of me going around. … Sorry I hate freedom? … Not like I did anything illegal … y’all do what you feel you need to.”

Robertson told a local news station they were allowed entry by Capitol Police and didn’t participat­e in any violence. Both Robertson and Fracker said in court they were military veterans.

Robert Keith Packer, 56, of Newport News, Va., was identified by an acquaintan­ce and other news outlets; several photograph­s taken at the Capitol appear to show him wearing a sweatshirt that read “Camp Auschwitz,” a reference to the infamous Nazi concentrat­ion camp.

The sweatshirt included the phrase “Work Brings Freedom,” a rough English translatio­n of the German words that hung over one of the gates of the camp, where more than 1.1 million people were killed during the Holocaust.

An arrest warrant charges Packer with unlawful entry and disorderly conduct on restricted Capitol grounds, misdemeano­rs punishable by as much as a year in prison.

He was released on his own recognizan­ce Wednesday afternoon, with orders to stay out of D.C. and to appear at a virtual hearing next week.

The Washington Post couldn’t reach Packer, and a lawyer who recently represente­d him didn’t respond to requests for comment.

Klete Keller, a five-time Olympic swimming medalist, was charged just days after he was spotted on video wearing a Team USA jacket in the Capitol Rotunda. FBI agents used video and other evidence to confirm his presence inside the Capitol, records show.

District police Wednesday also arrested Nicholas Rodean of Maryland. Rodean, a former employee of Navistar Direct Marketing in Fredrick, was fired after being photograph­ed in the Capitol with his company ID badge around his neck.

Others charged federally were William Pepe, arrested in New York; Andrew Williams, arrested in Florida; Josiah Colt, arrested in Idaho; and Kevin Loftus, arrested in Wisconsin, prosecutor­s said.

Williams is a firefighte­r in Sanford, Fla.; Pepe works for New York’s Metropolit­an Transporta­tion Authority. Both were suspended without pay.

WIlliams’ attorney, Vincent Citro, didn’t immediatel­y respond to a request for comment. But Citro said after Williams’ court appearance Wednesday that “the president and the Capitol Police encouraged despicable behavior. Mr. Williams took part in none of it,” Florida media reported.

CBS2 News in Idaho reported that Colt released a statement apologizin­g after he was photograph­ed hanging from the Senate gallery balcony, saying, “In the moment I thought I was doing the right thing. I realize now that my actions were inappropri­ate and I beg for forgivenes­s from America and my home state of Idaho.”

Separately, federal prosecutor­s in Brooklyn filed a weapons charge against a self-described Proud Boys member who apparently didn’t travel to Washington but allegedly posted threatenin­g statements on the social network Parler on and around Jan. 6 regarding Democratic Sen.-elect Raphael Warnock of Georgia and the Capitol insurrecti­on.

According to an affidavit, Eduard Florea of Queens responded to a post about Warnock writing, “Dead men can’t pass … laws” and later added, “The time for peace and civility is over. … Guns cleaned loaded … got a bunch of guys all armed and ready to deploy … we are just waiting for the word.”

The spate of additional arrests come as law enforcemen­t officials come a day after the Justice Department and the FBI announced they had created a sedition and conspiracy task force to investigat­ion the Jan. 6 Capitol breach, during which a woman was fatally shot by police and an officer died after he was injured.

Prosecutor­s have called the investigat­ion one of the largest ever undertaken by the FBI, which has led to charges against more than 70 people and the identifica­tion of 170 suspects to date.

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