The Morning Call

FBI raids Proud Boy’s home

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The FBI raided the home of the vice president of the Proud Boys’ Philadelph­ia chapter on Friday, seizing his computer, phone and other electronic­s to gather informatio­n on the Jan. 6 attack at the U.S. Capitol, his lawyer said Monday.

Aaron Whallon Wolkind, 37, woke up around 4 a.m. Friday to more than a dozen federal agents, dressed in riot gear and accompanie­d by an armored vehicle and battering ram, swarming his Newark, Delaware, home, and ordering through a loudspeake­r that he exit with his hands in the air, his lawyer Jonathon Moseley wrote in a court filing.

Wolkind exited and was handcuffed but not arrested or charged with any crimes. Agents “took all of his computer and computer devices and phones, including an old broken phone,” Moseley said. His girlfriend was also handcuffed but not arrested.

Moseley said he believes the search and seizure was to gather informatio­n in the case against Zach Rehl, the self-described president of the Philadelph­ia Proud Boys, whom Moseley also represents. Rehl was arrested in March on charges he conspired with other leading members of the organizati­on to attack the Capitol and has been in custody in Philadelph­ia pending trial since.

Details of the raid became public over the weekend, after Moseley filed a motion for bail in Rehl’s case and used the raid to support his contention that the government does not have sufficient evidence against Rehl to deny him bail and keep him in custody.

The search warrant permitted agents to seize records and informatio­n related to people who “collaborat­ed, conspired, or assisted,” or “communicat­ed about matters” including their whereabout­s, during the attack on the Capitol on Jan. 6, or the “legitimacy of the 2020 presidenti­al election,” the filing says. They could also collect “clothing items” associatin­g Wolkind with the Proud Boys, it said. The offenses cited on the warrant are the same criminal charges Rehl is facing, Moseley said.

Moseley argued that the raid on Wolkind — Rehl’s Proud Boys partner and close friend — shows the prosecutio­n lacks enough evidence to hold Rehl.

Prosecutor­s have alleged that Rehl played a central role in directing the Proud Boys’ actions during the deadly insurrecti­on, alongside Joseph Biggs, a Proud Boys organizer from Florida, and Ethan Nordean, of Washington state, whom authoritie­s have described as the organizati­on’s “de facto leader” on Jan. 6.

Excerpts of internal group conversati­ons filed by prosecutor­s in May paint Rehl as not only standing beside Biggs and Nordean as they stormed the Capitol, but also as one of a small inner circle selected weeks in advance to help lead the charge.

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