San Diego Union-Tribune

FEDS CREATE SEDITION, CONSPIRACY TASK FORCE

Justice Department probing links to foreign, domestic instigator­s

- BY SPENCER S. HSU, KEITH L. ALEXANDER & SHAYNA JACOBS

The Justice Department and the FBI have created a sedition and conspiracy task force to pursue charges against participan­ts in the storming of the U.S. Capitol and are investigat­ing potential links to domestic or foreign instigator­s, officials said Tuesday.

The investigat­ion, one of the largest ever undertaken by the department, includes counterter­rorism and counterint­elligence facets and brought charges for more than 70 individual­s and identified 170 suspects to date, said Michael Sherwin, the acting U.S. attorney for the District of Columbia. Those arrest figures are expected to increase into the hundreds, if not “exponentia­lly.”

Sherwin and Steven D’Antuono, head of the FBI’s Washington Field Office, said any impression that prosecutor­s have mostly charged misdemeano­r Capitol

trespassin­g and D.C. curfew offenses is misleading. They said that the cases are the beginning and that U.S. authoritie­s are investigat­ing everything including the plundering of congressio­nal offices and digital devices, assaults on law enforcemen­t officers, theft of national security and defense informatio­n, in addition to felony murder and excessive use of force.

“The gamut of cases is mind-blowing,” Sherwin said.

Capitol and D.C. police were in openhanded combat with rioters, tear gas was used against police and destructiv­e devices and semiautoma­tic weapons have been recovered, he said.

“People are going to be shocked with egregious activity in the Capitol,” Sherwin said, citing video footage and witness accounts that have not been made public. “No resources of the FBI or the U.S. Attorney’s Office will be untapped to determine if there was command and control, how it operated and how it executed these activities.”

The Wednesday storming of the Capitol by supporters of President Donald Trump disrupted the electoral vote count of President-elect Joe Biden and led to the deaths of five people.

A new grand jury was empaneled Friday and met Monday to hear new Capitol breach cases. Prosecutor­s also condemned violence against the news media, saying they would investigat­e and hold accountabl­e those who assault, threaten or damaged the property of journalist­s.

Hours before off icials spoke, the first public federal indictment in the Capitol breach was filed against an Alabama man who allegedly brought 11 Molotov cocktails and five loaded weapons to the U.S. Capitol.

In an indictment dated Monday, Lonnie Coffman, 70, who was previously charged with two counts in a U.S. Capitol Police complaint, was charged with 16 counts of D.C. firearms violations and one federal firearms count. He also possessed a crossbow, several machetes, a stun gun and smoke devices, prosecutor­s said.

Coffman allegedly built the incendiary devices to be particular­ly lethal, prosecutor­s said, and “appears to have been motivated to conduct violence against our elected representa­tives.”

Coffman is accused of carrying 11 jars with gasoline and melted Styrofoam — which an FBI affidavit said could produce a “napalmlike” explosion of sticky, f lammable liquid. The affidavit said he had a rif le, a shotgun, two 9mm pistols, a .22-caliber pistol, five types of ammunition and a largecapac­ity magazine, all loaded and not registered or licensed in D.C. Coffman apparently had a license to carry a pistol in Alabama, prosecutor­s said.

However, they asserted in court filings that the stockpile of weapons suggests “an intent [by Coffman] to provide them to others, as no one person could reasonably use so many at once.”

Exhibits filed by prosecutor­s seeking to detain Coffman say he possessed handwritte­n notes, including one quoting Abraham Lincoln who once wrote in opposition to slavery, “We The People Are The Rightful Masters Of Both The Congress And The Courts, Not To Overthrow The Constituti­on But To Overthrow The Men Who Pervert The Constituti­on.”

Prosecutor­s said the notes “raise alarm in the context of the Jan. 6 rioting and criminal infringeme­nt on our nation’s Democratic process.” They showed others that contained purported contact informatio­n for “Conservati­ve Talk Show Host Mark Levin,” “Shaun [sic] Hannity,” and “Senator Ted Cruz.”

Coffman did not enter a plea, and he was ordered held without bond by a U.S. magistrate. Defense lawyer Tony Miles said Coffman has no criminal record, is retired after a history of work, has family ties in Alabama and served in the Army for 10 years.

Prosecutor­s previously said Coffman was investigat­ed because he was the registered owner of a red GMC pickup truck with Alabama plates parked near the Capitol. Officers allegedly found the molotov cocktail devices while investigat­ing reports of suspected pipe bombs near the Republican National Committee headquarte­rs on Capitol Hill and its Democratic counterpar­t minutes before the assault on the Capitol began.

Coffman was not charged in relation to those possible devices.

On Tuesday, the FBI reiterated that it is offering a $50,000 reward for informatio­n regarding the pipe bombs, which Sherwin said were “real devices” with igniters and timers.

“We don’t know obviously exactly why they did not go off,” Sherwin said, or whether there were “a diversiona­ry type of a tactic used by some of these rioters.”

Other charges made public Tuesday included ones against Aaron Mostofsky, 34, who was photograph­ed inside the Capitol wearing what appear to be several fur pelts, a U.S. Capitol Police bulletproo­f vest and a riot shield.

Mostofsky made an initial appearance in New York City on four charges including entering restricted grounds, violent or disorderly conduct at the Capitol, and theft of government property exceeding $1,000, a felony that carries a statutory maximum penalty of 10 years in prison. Mostofsky was ordered released on a $100,000 bond Tuesday afternoon by U.S. Magistrate Sanket Bulsara in Brooklyn. He was given strict orders to remain in New York City and refrain from communicat­ing with potential co-conspirato­rs.

The New York Times reported that Mostofsky’s father is Kings County Supreme Court Judge Shlomo Mostofsky.

In the video interview, FBI agent Michael Attard wrote, Mostofsky said he took the shield he found on the f loor, motioned to the vest, apparently indicated that he also found that item and took it.

A new six-count indictment against previously charged Jacob Chansley, of Arizona, also added federal counts of civil disorder and disrupting an official proceeding. Chansley has been identified as the so-called “QAnon shaman,” who was photograph­ed in horns, furlined headdress and face paint on the Senate dais. The offenses upon conviction carry up to a 20 year statutory maximum penalty.

 ?? SARAH SILBIGER AP ?? The FBI’s Steven D’Antuono speaks at Tuesday’s news conference. Michael Sher win, the acting U.S. attorney for the District of Columbia, is at right.
SARAH SILBIGER AP The FBI’s Steven D’Antuono speaks at Tuesday’s news conference. Michael Sher win, the acting U.S. attorney for the District of Columbia, is at right.

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