Meanwhile in capital hill

116,460 Views | 1277 Replies | Last: 2 yr ago by concordtom
B.A. Bearacus
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You know Trump is desperate when Bearister is getting this in the mail:



Best use of those five invites (they earned a spot and would definitely go):
  • Golden One
  • LMK5
  • hanky1
  • BF2
  • BearlyAmazing
bearister
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B.A. Bearacus said:

You know Trump is desperate when Bearister is getting this in the mail:



Best use of those five invites (they earned a spot and would definitely go):
  • Golden One
  • LMK5
  • hanky1
  • BF2
  • BearlyAmazing


Thanks B.A. for a new a addition to my B.A. Bearacus Collectables.

I will be attending and bunking with Rudy and The Mooch.

The invite did not come in the mail. It was delivered in person by Hope Hicks. It was in an envelope bearing the King's wax seal...and she smiled.



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I got some friends inside
B.A. Bearacus
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B.A. Bearacus
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If the President insists, to this day, that the election was stolen from him, why *wouldn't* you try to kill some people on inauguration day?

BearForce2
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B.A. Bearacus said:

If the President insists, to this day, that the election was stolen from him, why *wouldn't* you try to kill some people on inauguration day?



Because murder is wrong and it also happens to be illegal. Try chewing on that while you look for your soul.

The difference between a right wing conspiracy and the truth is about 20 months.
AunBear89
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And you keep rooting for the Capitol rioters... Hypocrite.
B.A. Bearacus
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concordtom
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READ BOLDED PORTIONS BELOW FOR FUNNY STORIES OF HOW PEOPLE ARE GETTING CAUGHT

Their total lack of concern over getting caught and their friends' willingness to turn them in has helped authorities charge about 150 people as of Monday with federal crimes. But even with the help from the rioters themselves, investigators must still work rigorously to link the images to the vandalism and suspects to the acts on Jan. 6 in order to prove their case in court. And because so few were arrested at the scene, the FBI and the U.S. Marshals Service have been forced to send agents to track suspects down.

"Just because you've left the D.C. region, you can still expect a knock on the door if we find out that you were part of criminal activity inside the Capitol," Steven D'Antuono, the assistant director in charge of the FBI's Washington office, said earlier this month. "Bottom line the FBI is not sparing any resources in this investigation."

In the last few weeks, the FBI has received more than 200,000 photos and video tips related to the riot. Investigators have put up billboards in several states with photos of wanted rioters. Working on tips from co-workers, acquaintances and friends, agents have tracked down driver's license photos to match their faces with those captured on camera in the building. In some cases, authorities got records from Facebook or Twitter to connect their social media accounts to their email addresses or phone numbers. In others, agents used records from license plate readers to confirm their travels.

More than 800 are believed to have made their way into the Capitol, although it's likely not everyone will be tracked down and charged with a crime. Federal prosecutors are focusing on the most critical cases and the most egregious examples of wrongdoing. And they must weigh manpower, cost and evidence when charging rioters.
A special group of prosecutors is examining whether to bring sedition charges against the rioters, which carry up to 20 years in prison. One trio was charged with conspiracy; most have been charged with crimes like unlawful entry and disorderly conduct.

Many rioters posted selfies inside the Capitol to their social media accounts, gave interviews to news outlets describing their experience and readily admitted when questioned by federal investigators that they were there. One man created a Facebook album titled "Who's House? OUR HOUSE" filled with photos of himself and others on Capitol grounds, officials said.

"They might have thought, like so many people that work with Trump, that if the president tells me to do it, it's not breaking the law," said Michael Gerhardt, an expert on impeachment and professor at the University of North Carolina School of Law.

Others made blunders, like a Houston police officer, who denied he went into the Capitol, then agreed to let agents look at the pictures on his phone. Inside his deleted photos folder were pictures and videos, including selfies he took inside the building, authorities said.

Another man was wearing a court-ordered GPS monitor after a burglary conviction that tracked his every movement inside the building.

A retired firefighter from Long Island, New York, texted a video of himself in the Capitol rotunda to his girlfriend's brother, saying he was "at the tip of the spear," officials said. The brother happened to be a federal agent with the State Department's Diplomatic Security Service, who turned the video over to the FBI. A lawyer for the man, Thomas Fee, said that he "was not part of any attempt to take over the U.S. Capitol" and that "the allegation is that he merely walked through an open door into the Capitol nothing more."

Another man who was inside the Capitol was willing to rat out another rioter who stole House Speaker Nancy Pelosi's lectern and emailed the video to an FBI agent, even signing his own name to it. "Hello Nice FBI Lady," he wrote, "Here are the links to the videos. Looks like Podium Guy is in one of them, less the podium. Let me know if you need anything else."

In another case, a man was on a flight leaving D.C. two days after the riot when he kept shouting "Trump 2020!" and was kicked off. An airport police officer saw the man get off the plane and the man was booked on another flight. Forty-five minutes later, the officer was watching a video on Instagram and recognized the man in a group of rioters. The man, who was wearing the same shirt as the day he stormed the Capitol, was arrested at the airport, authorities said.

Even defense attorneys have acknowledged that the evidence poses a problem for them.
"I'm not a magician," said an attorney for the man seen in a photo carrying Pelosi's lectern. "We've got a photograph of our client in what appears to be inside a federal building or inside the Capitol with government property."
going4roses
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concordtom said:

READ BOLDED PORTIONS BELOW FOR FUNNY STORIES OF HOW PEOPLE ARE GETTING CAUGHT

Their total lack of concern over getting caught and their friends' willingness to turn them in has helped authorities charge about 150 people as of Monday with federal crimes. But even with the help from the rioters themselves, investigators must still work rigorously to link the images to the vandalism and suspects to the acts on Jan. 6 in order to prove their case in court. And because so few were arrested at the scene, the FBI and the U.S. Marshals Service have been forced to send agents to track suspects down.

"Just because you've left the D.C. region, you can still expect a knock on the door if we find out that you were part of criminal activity inside the Capitol," Steven D'Antuono, the assistant director in charge of the FBI's Washington office, said earlier this month. "Bottom line the FBI is not sparing any resources in this investigation."

In the last few weeks, the FBI has received more than 200,000 photos and video tips related to the riot. Investigators have put up billboards in several states with photos of wanted rioters. Working on tips from co-workers, acquaintances and friends, agents have tracked down driver's license photos to match their faces with those captured on camera in the building. In some cases, authorities got records from Facebook or Twitter to connect their social media accounts to their email addresses or phone numbers. In others, agents used records from license plate readers to confirm their travels.

More than 800 are believed to have made their way into the Capitol, although it's likely not everyone will be tracked down and charged with a crime. Federal prosecutors are focusing on the most critical cases and the most egregious examples of wrongdoing. And they must weigh manpower, cost and evidence when charging rioters.
A special group of prosecutors is examining whether to bring sedition charges against the rioters, which carry up to 20 years in prison. One trio was charged with conspiracy; most have been charged with crimes like unlawful entry and disorderly conduct.

Many rioters posted selfies inside the Capitol to their social media accounts, gave interviews to news outlets describing their experience and readily admitted when questioned by federal investigators that they were there. One man created a Facebook album titled "Who's House? OUR HOUSE" filled with photos of himself and others on Capitol grounds, officials said.

"They might have thought, like so many people that work with Trump, that if the president tells me to do it, it's not breaking the law," said Michael Gerhardt, an expert on impeachment and professor at the University of North Carolina School of Law.

Others made blunders, like a Houston police officer, who denied he went into the Capitol, then agreed to let agents look at the pictures on his phone. Inside his deleted photos folder were pictures and videos, including selfies he took inside the building, authorities said.

Another man was wearing a court-ordered GPS monitor after a burglary conviction that tracked his every movement inside the building.

A retired firefighter from Long Island, New York, texted a video of himself in the Capitol rotunda to his girlfriend's brother, saying he was "at the tip of the spear," officials said. The brother happened to be a federal agent with the State Department's Diplomatic Security Service, who turned the video over to the FBI. A lawyer for the man, Thomas Fee, said that he "was not part of any attempt to take over the U.S. Capitol" and that "the allegation is that he merely walked through an open door into the Capitol nothing more."

Another man who was inside the Capitol was willing to rat out another rioter who stole House Speaker Nancy Pelosi's lectern and emailed the video to an FBI agent, even signing his own name to it. "Hello Nice FBI Lady," he wrote, "Here are the links to the videos. Looks like Podium Guy is in one of them, less the podium. Let me know if you need anything else."

In another case, a man was on a flight leaving D.C. two days after the riot when he kept shouting "Trump 2020!" and was kicked off. An airport police officer saw the man get off the plane and the man was booked on another flight. Forty-five minutes later, the officer was watching a video on Instagram and recognized the man in a group of rioters. The man, who was wearing the same shirt as the day he stormed the Capitol, was arrested at the airport, authorities said.

Even defense attorneys have acknowledged that the evidence poses a problem for them.
"I'm not a magician," said an attorney for the man seen in a photo carrying Pelosi's lectern. "We've got a photograph of our client in what appears to be inside a federal building or inside the Capitol with government property."


Holy Toledo
Tell someone you love them and try to have a good day
Unit2Sucks
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going4roses said:

concordtom said:

READ BOLDED PORTIONS BELOW FOR FUNNY STORIES OF HOW PEOPLE ARE GETTING CAUGHT

Their total lack of concern over getting caught and their friends' willingness to turn them in has helped authorities charge about 150 people as of Monday with federal crimes. But even with the help from the rioters themselves, investigators must still work rigorously to link the images to the vandalism and suspects to the acts on Jan. 6 in order to prove their case in court. And because so few were arrested at the scene, the FBI and the U.S. Marshals Service have been forced to send agents to track suspects down.

"Just because you've left the D.C. region, you can still expect a knock on the door if we find out that you were part of criminal activity inside the Capitol," Steven D'Antuono, the assistant director in charge of the FBI's Washington office, said earlier this month. "Bottom line the FBI is not sparing any resources in this investigation."

In the last few weeks, the FBI has received more than 200,000 photos and video tips related to the riot. Investigators have put up billboards in several states with photos of wanted rioters. Working on tips from co-workers, acquaintances and friends, agents have tracked down driver's license photos to match their faces with those captured on camera in the building. In some cases, authorities got records from Facebook or Twitter to connect their social media accounts to their email addresses or phone numbers. In others, agents used records from license plate readers to confirm their travels.

More than 800 are believed to have made their way into the Capitol, although it's likely not everyone will be tracked down and charged with a crime. Federal prosecutors are focusing on the most critical cases and the most egregious examples of wrongdoing. And they must weigh manpower, cost and evidence when charging rioters.
A special group of prosecutors is examining whether to bring sedition charges against the rioters, which carry up to 20 years in prison. One trio was charged with conspiracy; most have been charged with crimes like unlawful entry and disorderly conduct.

Many rioters posted selfies inside the Capitol to their social media accounts, gave interviews to news outlets describing their experience and readily admitted when questioned by federal investigators that they were there. One man created a Facebook album titled "Who's House? OUR HOUSE" filled with photos of himself and others on Capitol grounds, officials said.

"They might have thought, like so many people that work with Trump, that if the president tells me to do it, it's not breaking the law," said Michael Gerhardt, an expert on impeachment and professor at the University of North Carolina School of Law.

Others made blunders, like a Houston police officer, who denied he went into the Capitol, then agreed to let agents look at the pictures on his phone. Inside his deleted photos folder were pictures and videos, including selfies he took inside the building, authorities said.

Another man was wearing a court-ordered GPS monitor after a burglary conviction that tracked his every movement inside the building.

A retired firefighter from Long Island, New York, texted a video of himself in the Capitol rotunda to his girlfriend's brother, saying he was "at the tip of the spear," officials said. The brother happened to be a federal agent with the State Department's Diplomatic Security Service, who turned the video over to the FBI. A lawyer for the man, Thomas Fee, said that he "was not part of any attempt to take over the U.S. Capitol" and that "the allegation is that he merely walked through an open door into the Capitol nothing more."

Another man who was inside the Capitol was willing to rat out another rioter who stole House Speaker Nancy Pelosi's lectern and emailed the video to an FBI agent, even signing his own name to it. "Hello Nice FBI Lady," he wrote, "Here are the links to the videos. Looks like Podium Guy is in one of them, less the podium. Let me know if you need anything else."

In another case, a man was on a flight leaving D.C. two days after the riot when he kept shouting "Trump 2020!" and was kicked off. An airport police officer saw the man get off the plane and the man was booked on another flight. Forty-five minutes later, the officer was watching a video on Instagram and recognized the man in a group of rioters. The man, who was wearing the same shirt as the day he stormed the Capitol, was arrested at the airport, authorities said.

Even defense attorneys have acknowledged that the evidence poses a problem for them.
"I'm not a magician," said an attorney for the man seen in a photo carrying Pelosi's lectern. "We've got a photograph of our client in what appears to be inside a federal building or inside the Capitol with government property."


Holy Toledo


This is like those stories from Darwin about the Galapagos. When a predator, or humans, are first introduced to the ecosystem, the animals don't have any instinctual fear.

Here we have an intrepid group of idiots created from generations of white privilege. They couldn't conceive of being punished for this activity. Some were surprised and dismayed to see the police treating them like Black (lives matters) protesters. They expected the police to be on their side welcoming their insurrection. The crazier thing is that they weren't entirely wrong.

It will be very interesting to compare the sentencing requests and results from the people who vandalized the capitol and the protests this summer that caused Trump to spuriously create an EO that he has since claimed would impose a 10 year sentence.
BearForce2
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AunBear89 said:

And you keep rooting for the Capitol rioters... Hypocrite.
No. Trump incited your erection.
The difference between a right wing conspiracy and the truth is about 20 months.
82gradDLSdad
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Unit2Sucks said:

going4roses said:

concordtom said:

READ BOLDED PORTIONS BELOW FOR FUNNY STORIES OF HOW PEOPLE ARE GETTING CAUGHT

Their total lack of concern over getting caught and their friends' willingness to turn them in has helped authorities charge about 150 people as of Monday with federal crimes. But even with the help from the rioters themselves, investigators must still work rigorously to link the images to the vandalism and suspects to the acts on Jan. 6 in order to prove their case in court. And because so few were arrested at the scene, the FBI and the U.S. Marshals Service have been forced to send agents to track suspects down.

"Just because you've left the D.C. region, you can still expect a knock on the door if we find out that you were part of criminal activity inside the Capitol," Steven D'Antuono, the assistant director in charge of the FBI's Washington office, said earlier this month. "Bottom line the FBI is not sparing any resources in this investigation."

In the last few weeks, the FBI has received more than 200,000 photos and video tips related to the riot. Investigators have put up billboards in several states with photos of wanted rioters. Working on tips from co-workers, acquaintances and friends, agents have tracked down driver's license photos to match their faces with those captured on camera in the building. In some cases, authorities got records from Facebook or Twitter to connect their social media accounts to their email addresses or phone numbers. In others, agents used records from license plate readers to confirm their travels.

More than 800 are believed to have made their way into the Capitol, although it's likely not everyone will be tracked down and charged with a crime. Federal prosecutors are focusing on the most critical cases and the most egregious examples of wrongdoing. And they must weigh manpower, cost and evidence when charging rioters.
A special group of prosecutors is examining whether to bring sedition charges against the rioters, which carry up to 20 years in prison. One trio was charged with conspiracy; most have been charged with crimes like unlawful entry and disorderly conduct.

Many rioters posted selfies inside the Capitol to their social media accounts, gave interviews to news outlets describing their experience and readily admitted when questioned by federal investigators that they were there. One man created a Facebook album titled "Who's House? OUR HOUSE" filled with photos of himself and others on Capitol grounds, officials said.

"They might have thought, like so many people that work with Trump, that if the president tells me to do it, it's not breaking the law," said Michael Gerhardt, an expert on impeachment and professor at the University of North Carolina School of Law.

Others made blunders, like a Houston police officer, who denied he went into the Capitol, then agreed to let agents look at the pictures on his phone. Inside his deleted photos folder were pictures and videos, including selfies he took inside the building, authorities said.

Another man was wearing a court-ordered GPS monitor after a burglary conviction that tracked his every movement inside the building.

A retired firefighter from Long Island, New York, texted a video of himself in the Capitol rotunda to his girlfriend's brother, saying he was "at the tip of the spear," officials said. The brother happened to be a federal agent with the State Department's Diplomatic Security Service, who turned the video over to the FBI. A lawyer for the man, Thomas Fee, said that he "was not part of any attempt to take over the U.S. Capitol" and that "the allegation is that he merely walked through an open door into the Capitol nothing more."

Another man who was inside the Capitol was willing to rat out another rioter who stole House Speaker Nancy Pelosi's lectern and emailed the video to an FBI agent, even signing his own name to it. "Hello Nice FBI Lady," he wrote, "Here are the links to the videos. Looks like Podium Guy is in one of them, less the podium. Let me know if you need anything else."

In another case, a man was on a flight leaving D.C. two days after the riot when he kept shouting "Trump 2020!" and was kicked off. An airport police officer saw the man get off the plane and the man was booked on another flight. Forty-five minutes later, the officer was watching a video on Instagram and recognized the man in a group of rioters. The man, who was wearing the same shirt as the day he stormed the Capitol, was arrested at the airport, authorities said.

Even defense attorneys have acknowledged that the evidence poses a problem for them.
"I'm not a magician," said an attorney for the man seen in a photo carrying Pelosi's lectern. "We've got a photograph of our client in what appears to be inside a federal building or inside the Capitol with government property."


Holy Toledo


This is like those stories from Darwin about the Galapagos. When a predator, or humans, are first introduced to the ecosystem, the animals don't have any instinctual fear.

Here we have an intrepid group of idiots created from generations of white privilege. They couldn't conceive of being punished for this activity. Some were surprised and dismayed to see the police treating them like Black (lives matters) protesters. They expected the police to be on their side welcoming their insurrection. The crazier thing is that they weren't entirely wrong.

It will be very interesting to compare the sentencing requests and results from the people who vandalized the capitol and the protests this summer that caused Trump to spuriously create an EO that he has since claimed would impose a 10 year sentence.


No rocket scientists here in Bay Point either. On our morning walk yesterday my wife and I saw a small army of FBI agents going in and out of a single family home in one of our better neighborhoods. When we got home we did some searching on the internets. Turns out the homeowner was being arrested for threatening a New York congressman with social media posts and emails. I'm heartened at the enforcement of the 'ignorance of the law is no defense' lawlessness. I hope it continues.
bearister
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Well, this is one way to compromise Proud Boys leadership. This guy would be well advised to go to ground ASAP. The Whitey Bulger of the Alt Right.

Proud Boys leader Enrique Tarrio was an FBI informant



https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/jan/27/proud-boys-leader-enrique-tarrio-fbi-informant?CMP=Share_iOSApp_Other
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Send my credentials to the House of Detention
I got some friends inside
Sebastabear
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bearister said:

Well, this is one way to compromise Proud Boys leadership. This guy would be well advised to go to ground ASAP. The Whitey Bulger of the Alt Right.

Proud Boys leader Enrique Tarrio was an FBI informant



https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/jan/27/proud-boys-leader-enrique-tarrio-fbi-informant?CMP=Share_iOSApp_Other
Wowza. I like the "I don't recall any of this" defense.

Honestly guys, I don't recall being an FBI informant. Maybe I was, maybe I wasn't. I mean, who can really keep track of all this stuff?

To be fair, just the other day I found some stories about how I had briefly served as a secret agent against the Soviets during the cold war. Then this guy with a gold finger sent his henchman who had a bowler hat with a razor blade in the brim after me. Had totally slipped my mind. Could happen to anyone.
going4roses
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Anybody know if this document is correct/accurate



If there is any truth to this who should be held accountable?
Tell someone you love them and try to have a good day
Eastern Oregon Bear
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going4roses said:

Anybody know if this document is correct/accurate



If there is any truth to this who should be held accountable?
Is the Defense Department still using the date stamp and ink pad technology they used back in World War II?
dimitrig
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Eastern Oregon Bear said:

going4roses said:

Anybody know if this document is correct/accurate



If there is any truth to this who should be held accountable?
Is the Defense Department still using the date stamp and ink pad technology they used back in World War II?


Probably.

bearister
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Donald Trump should be sued to pay for Capitol riot cleanup


https://www.usatoday.com/story/opinion/2021/01/31/post-capitol-riot-cleanup-and-how-pay-column/6700427002/
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Send my credentials to the House of Detention
I got some friends inside
okaydo
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going4roses
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okaydo said:




Damn
Tell someone you love them and try to have a good day
going4roses
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going4roses said:

Anybody know if this document is correct/accurate



If there is any truth to this who should be held accountable?





Tell someone you love them and try to have a good day
bearister
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Merrick Garland's 'flawless' work in Oklahoma City crucial in white supremacy fight


https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/feb/01/merrick-garland-oklahoma-city-timothy-mcveigh-attorney-general?CMP=Share_iOSApp_Other
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chazzed
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Some of the rioters who stormed the Capitol did not even vote in the 2020 election.

https://www.cnn.com/2021/02/01/us/capitol-rioters-non-voters-invs/
okaydo
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boot
okaydo
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Eastern Oregon Bear
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okaydo said:


Aside from the obvious answer (Hell no!!!), wouldn't she be on the no fly list?
Big C
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She'd need to fly really high to get over that wall!
dimitrig
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Eastern Oregon Bear said:

okaydo said:


Aside from the obvious answer (Hell no!!!), wouldn't she be on the no fly list?

Sure, but she's not welcome back after her vacation.

Eastern Oregon Bear
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Big C said:


She'd need to fly really high to get over that wall!
You misspelled big beautiful wall that her Mexican hotel taxes will pay for.
concordtom
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More arrests, including one of the guys who smashed the window that got the woman shot-dead inside.



Zachary Alam, (fur hat guy) 29, was arrested on Saturday in Denver, Pennsylvania, at the Penn Amish Motel.

Alam was seen "in video footage shouting 'F--- the blue' multiple times in the faces of the U.S. Capitol Police officers who were standing post outside the Speaker's lobby door,"

"Seconds after the officers stepped away from the doorway," Alam began "kicking the glass panels" and then smashing them with a helmet he had taken from another person in the crowd, the complaint said.

He "violently struck the middle glass panel repeatedly with the helmet, further shattering the window," the complaint said. The complaint noted that chants of "Break it down!" and "Let's f---ing go!" could be heard in the background of these videos.
Ashli Babbitt was later fatally shot while trying to climb through one of the shattered windows.

The FBI agent said they were able to track Alam down after receiving an anonymous tip from a person who identified themselves as a "family member" of Alam's on January 14. The relative gave the FBI details about Alam's identity, which agents used to find his driver's-license photo, which matched the man in the videos from the riot, the agent said.

The criminal complaint said the relative told the FBI that Alam had called them from a new phone number after the riot and wouldn't say where he was.

The complaint described the relative as saying that Alam told them that "he was sorry for what he had done at the U.S. Capitol but he was not going to turn himself into authorities because he did not want to go to jail again."

The relative also told the FBI that after the riot Alam asked other relatives if he could stay with them, saying the FBI was looking for him.




https://www.yahoo.com/news/capitol-rioter-filmed-breaking-windows-141851225.html
concordtom
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The impeachment is going to review all this stuff again, and America needs to keep the horror of it all fresh in their minds.
FoxNews will show anything but the actual evidence.
The Senate would be wise to proceed on weekends when the viewing audience is widest.
concordtom
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going4roses said:

going4roses said:

Anybody know if this document is correct/accurate



If there is any truth to this who should be held accountable?







That's what the term SELF-DELUSION is for.

They've all been brainwashed, and Radical Right Wing media is to blame: FoxNews, OAN, Newsmax, Rush Limbaugh, etc.
going4roses
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Holy kaka
Tell someone you love them and try to have a good day
okaydo
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B.A. Bearacus
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MinotStateBeav said:




Remember this picture next time your politicians send your kids to war.
This post should be recalled when we do an end-of-year vote on dumbest post of 2021.
 
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