Los Angeles Times

A challenge for prosecutor­s in Capitol riot

Oath Keepers leader is suspected of plotting the Jan. 6 siege, but he didn’t set foot inside.

- By Del Quentin Wilber

WASHINGTON — The Justice Department has brought charges against more than 400 people who stormed the Capitol during the Jan. 6 riot, but one of its most pivotal potential cases involves a man who never set foot inside the building.

The inquiry highlights the Justice Department’s focus on holding accountabl­e leaders of militia and farright groups who prosecutor­s suspect played significan­t roles in encouragin­g and plotting the storming of the Capitol. It also underscore­s the difficulty in bringing cases against individual­s who kept physical distance from the melee.

Federal prosecutor­s are seeking to build a criminal case against Stewart Rhodes, the founder of the anti-government Oath Keepers, on charges he conspired with members of his far-right organizati­on to block the counting of electoral votes that day, according to federal law enforcemen­t officials and a review of court documents.

“There is always a greater challenge in implicatin­g leaders and people who may be smart enough to keep away from the actual crime scenes,” said James Trusty, a former top Justice Department gang prosecutor.

The Oath Keepers leader has not been indicted, but 12 members of the Oath Keepers have been charged with conspiracy in an indictment that identifies Rhodes as “Person One,” a leader who urged his followers to descend on Washington and communicat­ed extensivel­y with those who stormed the building. All 12 have pleaded not guilty. Separately, one member of the Oath Keepers, who was not alleged to have been part of that conspiracy, on Friday became the first person to plead guilty to participat­ing in the riot.

Rhodes, a 55-year-old Montana resident, could not be reached for comment. He has said he has done nothing wrong, telling the Washington Post in March that “we had no plan to enter the Capitol, zero plan to do that.” Those who went into the Capitol “went totally off mission,” Rhodes told the newspaper.

In a speech late last month in Laredo, Texas, he seemed resigned to being charged in the attack. “I may go to jail soon,” he said.

A Justice Department spokesman declined to comment about Rhodes or the broader investigat­ion into the Oath Keepers.

Federal prosecutor­s say the vast majority of the more than 400 people charged in the Capitol riot either entered the building or assaulted police officers. Many were caught on video, or were identified after they posted photos and statements on social media. Authoritie­s have arrested at least 20 California residents accused of participat­ing in the riot but not being part of extremist groups. Those charged include Gina Bisignano, a Beverly Hills estheticia­n and eyelash stylist, and Christian Secor, a UCLA student.

The Justice Department will face a tougher time targeting leaders of militia and extremist groups who did not enter the fray for a host of reasons, former prosecutor­s said. The Justice Department has not publicly disclosed the leaders whom they may be scrutinizi­ng. Law enforcemen­t officials, speaking on condition of anonymity to discuss an ongoing inquiry, confirmed earlier news reports that Rhodes is under investigat­ion.

Such probes require time-consuming tactics more commonly associated with taking down drug gangs and the Mafia, and they do not always pan out. Militia and extremist groups have tended to use encrypted applicatio­ns to communicat­e, making it difficult for authoritie­s to get a full picture into their plans. The alleged plotting took place over just a few weeks. In going after organized criminal groups, on the other hand, prosecutor­s frequently have years’ worth of crimes to target.

Legal experts said those hurdles will force authoritie­s to rely extensivel­y on cooperatio­n from lower-level members of extremist groups in building cases against leaders. Such cooperatio­n is no sure thing. The former prosecutor­s noted that Oath Keepers, for example, hold fervent antigovern­ment beliefs and, so far, don’t face the kinds of lengthy prison sentences that frequently convince drug offenders to provide informatio­n in exchange for leniency.

But prosecutor­s may have taken a step in that direction Friday when heavy metal musician Jon Schaffer, a founding member of the Oath Keepers, pleaded guilty Friday to two felony charges that he participat­ed in the riot and agreed to cooperate with prosecutor­s in exchange for a lighter sentence. The 53-year-old was not charged in the 12-person Oath Keepers conspiracy indictment, and it’s not clear what informatio­n the Indiana resident might provide about Rhodes or others in the organizati­on.

“The government typically develops cases against lower-level people in the hopes of obtaining their cooperatio­n to target those at higher levels with greater decision-making authority,” said Gregg Bernstein, a former federal prosecutor. “It works its way up. That looks like what is going on here.”

Rhodes founded the Oath Keepers in 2009 to purportedl­y protect the rights of American citizens from what were deemed to be shadowy elites. A favorite of extremist and militia groups and known for wearing a black patch over an eye he lost in a gun accident, Rhodes focused his recruitmen­t efforts on current and former military and law enforcemen­t personnel. He maintained that such highly trained people would be best positioned to thwart government leaders from imposing tyranny.

In more recent years the Oath Keepers pivoted to supporting then-President Trump against what they feared was a “deep state” coup.

By November, Rhodes had become an ardent backer of the former president’s falsehood-filled campaign to overturn an election he lost. On Jan. 4, prosecutor­s say, Rhodes posted an article on the group’s website urging “patriots” to descend on Washington to “stand tall in support of President Trump’s fight to defeat the enemies foreign and domestic who are attempting a coup.”

In indictment­s and court filings, federal prosecutor­s detailed Rhodes’ role in encouragin­g and organizing Oath Keepers’ activities in Washing ton and his communicat­ions with his members before, during and after the siege, which left five people dead and scores of others injured. Rhodes watched the confrontat­ion safely from the Capitol grounds.

In accusing the 12 Oath Keepers of conspiring on Jan. 6, prosecutor­s alleged in court papers that Rhodes and Oath Keepers engaged in a long-running group discussion on an encrypted app, Signal, in which they “were activating plans to use force on January 6.”

“Prior to the operation,” prosecutor­s wrote, Rhodes and the other Oath Keepers “discussed topics such as what kind of weapons to bring, using handheld radios to communicat­e during the January 6 operation and, according to Person One, the existence of ‘several well equipped QRFs outside DC’” and “many, many others, from other groups, who will be watching and waiting on the outside in case of worst case scenarios.”

Prosecutor­s said a QRF was what the group called a “Quick Reaction Force” of heavily armed men and women stationed in jurisdicti­ons that did not have Washington’s strict gun laws.

Rhodes came to Washington on Jan. 5 and helped oversee security Oath Keepers provided for various Trump associates at the next day’s “Stop the Steal” rally and associated events, according to associates and court filings. Among those who received Oath Keepers security: Roger Stone, a close friend of Trump and Republican political operative.

After Trump’s rally on the Ellipse outside the White House — in which the president urged his followers to “fight like hell” for him — Rhodes and other Oath Keepers members headed to the Capitol. Throughout the morning and afternoon, Rhodes touched base with Oath Keepers by phone and over the group Signal chat, prosecutor­s alleged in court filings.

In the most recent indictment, prosecutor­s alleged Rhodes and members of the Oath Keepers called one another a half-dozen times in the hours and minutes before the Capitol was stormed. Prosecutor­s cited as “critically” important a 97-second call between Rhodes and a Florida leader of the Oath Keepers just before that man and seven others formed a “stack” formation and pushed through police and into the building.

As the siege played out, prosecutor­s alleged Rhodes praised those trying to get inside the building. “Patriots are taking it into their own hands,” he wrote in a group chat, according to prosecutor­s. “They’ve had enough.”

He also posted a photograph of the Capitol, saying it showed “patriots pounding on doors,” prosecutor­s wrote in court papers. The New York Times and the Washington Post have reported previously that Rhodes is under Justice Department investigat­ion.

Steven Levin, a former prosecutor, said authoritie­s can’t rely on innuendo if they want to charge Rhodes. They will need someone who can explain what was said during the phone calls.

“The 97-second phone conversati­on is evidence, but you need someone to fill in the substance of the conversati­on,” Levin said. “You can’t just assume that the leader said go storm the Capitol .... Building cases against such leaders will be difficult for that reason. They are far harder to make than going after those caught on video.”

 ?? Kent Nishimura Los Angeles Times ?? TRUMP supporters try to push through a barricade on Jan. 6 after far-right leaders called for resistance to what they said was a coup attempt. More than 400 people have been charged by the Justice Department.
Kent Nishimura Los Angeles Times TRUMP supporters try to push through a barricade on Jan. 6 after far-right leaders called for resistance to what they said was a coup attempt. More than 400 people have been charged by the Justice Department.

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