Capitol rioters included highly trained ex-military and cops
As President Donald Trump’s supporters massed outside the Capitol last week and sang the national anthem, a line of men wearing olive-drab helmets and body armor trudged purposefully up the marble stairs in a single-file line, each man holding the jacket collar of the one ahead.
The formation, known as
“Ranger File,” is standard operating procedure for a combat team that is
“stacking up” to breach a building — instantly recognizable to any U.S. soldier
or Marine who served in Iraq and Afghanistan. It was a chilling sign that many
at the vanguard of the mob that stormed the seat of American democracy either
had military training or were trained by those who did.
An Associated Press
review of public records, social media posts and videos shows at least 21
current or former members of the U.S. military or law enforcement have been
identified as being at or near the Capitol riot, with more than a dozen others
under investigation but not yet named. In many cases, those who stormed the
Capitol appeared to employ tactics, body armor and technology such as two-way
radio headsets that were similar to those of the very police they were
confronting.
Experts in homegrown
extremism have warned for years about efforts by far-right militants and
white-supremacist groups to radicalize and recruit people with military and law
enforcement training, and they say the Jan. 6 insurrection that left five
people dead saw some of their worst fears realized.
“ISIS and al-Qaida would drool over
having someone with the training and experience of a U.S. military officer,”
said Michael German, a former FBI agent and fellow with the Brennan Center for
Justice at New York University. “These people have training and capabilities that
far exceed what any foreign terrorist group can do. Foreign terrorist groups
don’t have any members who have badges.”
Among the most prominent
to emerge is a retired Air Force lieutenant colonel and decorated combat
veteran from Texas who was arrested after he was photographed wearing a helmet
and body armor on the floor of the Senate, holding a pair of zip-tie handcuffs.
Another Air Force
veteran from San Diego was shot and killed by a Capitol Police officer as she
tried to leap through a barricade near the House chamber. A retired Navy SEAL,
among the most elite special warfare operators in the military, posted a
Facebook video about traveling from his Ohio home to the rally and seemingly
approving of the invasion of “our building, our house.”
Two police officers from
a small Virginia town, both of them former infantrymen, were arrested by the
FBI after posting a selfie of themselves inside the Capitol, one flashing his
middle finger at the camera.
Also under scrutiny is
an active-duty psychological warfare captain from North Carolina who organized
three busloads of people who headed to Washington for the “Save America” rally
in support the president’s false claim that the November election was stolen
from him. Judges across the country have repeatedly dismissed cases challenging
the election results, and former Attorney General William Barr, a Trump ally,
has said there was no sign of widespread fraud.
While the Pentagon
declined to provide an estimate for how many other active-duty military personnel
are under investigation, the military’s top leaders were concerned enough ahead
of President-elect Joe Biden’s inauguration that they issued a highly unusual
warning to all service members this week that the right to free speech gives no
one the right to commit violence.
The chief of the U.S.
Capitol Police was forced to resign following the breach and several officers
have been suspended pending the outcome of investigations into their conduct,
including one who posed for a selfie with a rioter and another who was seen
wearing one of the Trump’s red “Make America Great Again” caps.
The AP’s review of
hundreds of videos and photos from the insurrectionist riot shows scores of
people mixed in the crowd who were wearing military-style gear, including helmets,
body armor, rucksacks and two-way radios. Dozens carried canisters of bear
spray, baseball bats, hockey sticks and pro-Trump flags attached to stout poles
later used to bash police officers.
A close examination of
the group marching up the steps to help breach the Capitol shows they wore
military-style patches that read “MILITIA” and “OATHKEEPER.” Others were
wearing patches and insignias representing far-right militant groups, including
the Proud Boys, the Three Percenters and various self-styled state militias.
The Oath Keepers, which
claims to count thousands of current and former law enforcement officials and
military veterans as members, have become fixtures at protests and
counter-protests across the country, often heavily armed with semi-automatic
carbines and tactical shotguns.
Stewart
Rhodes, an Army veteran who founded the Oath Keepers in 2009 as a reaction to
the presidency of Barack Obama, had been saying for weeks before the Capitol
riot that his group was preparing for a civil war and was “armed, prepared to
go in if the president calls us up.”
Adam
Newbold, the retired Navy SEAL from Lisbon, Ohio, whose more than two-decade
military career includes multiple combat awards for valor, said in a Jan. 5
Facebook video, “We are just very prepared, very capable and very skilled
patriots ready for a fight.”
He
later posted a since-deleted follow-up video after the riot saying he was
“proud” of the assault.
Newbold,
45, did not respond to multiple messages from the AP but in an interview with the
Task & Purpose website he denied ever going inside the Capitol. He added
that because of the fallout from the videos he has resigned from a program that
helps prepare potential SEAL applicants.
Army
commanders at Fort Bragg in North Carolina are investigating the possible
involvement of Capt. Emily Rainey, the 30-year-old psychological operations
officer and Afghanistan war veteran who told the AP she traveled with 100
others to Washington to “stand against election fraud.” She insisted she acted
within Army regulations and that no one in her group entered the Capitol or
broke the law.
“I was a private citizen and doing everything
right and within my rights,” Rainey said.
Retired
Air Force Lt. Col. Larry Rendall Brock Jr. of Texas was released to home
confinement Thursday after a prosecutor alleged the former fighter pilot had
zip-tie handcuffs on the Senate floor because he planned to take hostages.
“He means to kidnap, restrain, perhaps try,
perhaps execute members of the U.S. government,” Assistant U.S. Attorney Jay
Weimer said. “His prior experience and training make him all the more dangerous.”
More
than 110 people have been arrested on charges related to the Capitol riot so
far, ranging from curfew violations to serious federal felonies related to
theft and weapons possession.
Brian
Harrell, who served as the assistant secretary for infrastructure protection at
the Department of Homeland Security until last year, said it is “obviously
problematic” when “extremist bad actors” have military and law enforcement
backgrounds.
“Many have specialized training, some have seen
combat, and nearly all have been fed disinformation and propaganda from
illegitimate sources,” Harrell said. “They are fueled by conspiracy theories,
feel as if something is being stolen from them, and they are not interested in
debate. This is a powder keg cocktail waiting to blow.”
The
FBI is warning of the potential for more bloodshed. In an internal bulletin
issued Sunday, the bureau warned of plans for armed protests at all 50 state
capitals and in Washington, D.C., in the coming weeks.
Meanwhile,
police departments in such major cities as New York, Los Angeles, Las Vegas,
Houston and Philadelphia announced they were investigating whether members of
their agencies participated in the Capitol riot. The Philadelphia area’s
transit authority is also investigating whether seven of its police officers
who attended Trump’s rally in Washington broke any laws.
A
Texas sheriff announced last week that he had reported one of his lieutenants
to the FBI after she posted photos of herself on social media with a crowd
outside the Capitol. Bexar County Sheriff Javier Salazar said Lt. Roxanne
Mathai, a 46-year-old jailer, had the right to attend the rally but he’s
investigating whether she may have broken the law.
One
of the posts Mathai shared was a photo that appeared to be taken Jan. 6 from
among the mass of Trump supporters outside the Capitol, captioned: “Not gonna
lie. ... aside from my kids, this was, indeed, the best day of my life. And
it’s not over yet.”
A
lawyer for Mathai, a mother and longtime San Antonio resident, said she
attended the Trump rally but never entered the Capitol.
In Houston, Police Chief Art Acevedo said an 18-year veteran of the department suspected of joining the mob that breached the Capitol was placed on leave and will face a disciplinary hearing.
“There is no excuse for criminal activity,
especially from a police officer,” Acevedo said. “I can’t tell you the anger I
feel at the thought of a police officer, and other police officers, thinking
they get to storm the Capitol.”