Los Angeles Times

Ex-DEA agent is charged in insurrecti­on

O.C. man, who was on leave from the federal agency at the time, is accused of entering the Capitol grounds with a firearm.

- By James Queally

A former DEA agent from Orange County has been charged with taking part in the insurrecti­on at the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, the latest law enforcemen­t member linked to the deadly uprising.

Mark Sami Ibrahim, 33, was arrested Tuesday in Washington, D.C., and charged with entering the Capitol grounds with a firearm and lying to federal law enforcemen­t officials, according to the U.S. Department of Justice. Court documents describe Ibrahim as living in Orange County, and public records suggest he once lived in Anaheim.

Photos show Ibrahim posing with his Drug Enforcemen­t Administra­tion badge and gun on his hip as he stands among others waving pro-Trump banners, according to court documents made public Tuesday.

A broad spectrum of extremists — including members of the Proud Boys, Oath Keepers and Three Percenters — joined with hundreds of former President Trump’s most ardent supporters on Jan. 6 to storm the Capitol in an attempt to stop the certificat­ion of President Biden’s election, after Trump spent months promoting unfounded claims of election theft.

More than 150 officers reported injuries, some permanent, with three officers dying in the aftermath of the melee.

It is unclear if Ibrahim entered the Capitol, but photos and cellphone records confirm the DEA agent was in areas far beyond the barricades torn down by Trump’s supporters.

In one picture, Ibrahim can be seen smiling with his hand resting on his firearm while standing next to a man holding an American flag and a pitchfork.

Ibrahim had announced his intention to resign from the DEA several weeks before the insurrecti­on and was on personal leave at the time of the riot, according to court filings.

Calls to the DEA seeking comment were not immediatel­y returned. Ibrahim’s defense attorney, Darren Richie, described the charges as an overreach.

“Mr. Ibrahim played no role in any riot. He never committed any violence, attempted to enter any buildings nor induced or promoted others to do so. Further, Mr. Ibrahim remained honest and voluntaril­y cooperativ­e with authoritie­s. Mr. Ibrahim has dedicated his entire life, with perfection, to the service of this country and its citizens whether through his military or law enforcemen­t capacities,” Richie wrote in an e-mail to The Times. “This indictment results from conjecture, political pressure and a flawed attempt to paint a specific narrative through pictures taken wholly out of context.”

In late March, Ibrahim told Fox News host Tucker Carlson he had been fired by the DEA and claimed he had attended the riot alongside his brother, an FBI agent. Ibrahim had also been involved in a group chat with at least five other law enforcemen­t officers on the day of the insurrecti­on, according to court filings.

After Ibrahim began posting pictures that day, one of the other officers sent an alarmed message in the group chat.

“Question Mark, you are carrying your duty weapon and your badge/creds?” the message asked. “I need to know this mark.”

The court filing did not disclose informatio­n about any other law enforcemen­t personnel Ibrahim might have been in contact with that day.

Federal investigat­ors interviewe­d Ibrahim roughly a week before he appeared on Carlson’s show. In that interview, Ibrahim told investigat­ors he traveled to the Capitol on Jan. 6 at the request of a friend who “had been asked by the FBI to document the event.” He denied posing for pictures displaying his federal law enforcemen­t credential­s or firearm.

But in a separate interview, the friend, whose name was not disclosed in court documents, said Ibrahim “crafted this story in an effort to ‘cover his ass,’ ” and denied being dispatched to the Capitol by the FBI.

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