Rep. Steve Cohen, D-Tenn., ominously suggested Monday that Donald Trump supporters within the National Guard charged with helping protect Joe Biden “might want to do something” to the president-elect.

In an unprecedented show of security force, 25,000 National Guard troops have been deployed to Washington, D.C., to protect Biden’s inauguration this week. The city is on edge after a pro-Trump mob stormed the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, which disrupted the certification of Biden’s Electoral College victory and resulted in several deaths. The FBI is vetting Guard service members charged with protecting the Capitol this week.

Cohen told CNN he had been reminded that former India Prime Minister Indira Gandhi was assassinated by her own bodyguards and said any Trump supporters within National Guard units were suspicious.

STATES ACTIVATE NATIONAL GUARD, CLOSE CAPITOL BUILDINGS AHEAD OF BIDEN INAUGURATION AND POSSIBLE VIOLENCE

“The [National] Guard is 90 some-odd percent male, and only about 20 percent of white males voted for Biden,” he said. “You’ve got to figure that in the Guard, which is predominantly more conservative … they’re probably not more than 25 percent of the people there protecting us that voted for Biden. The other 75 percent are in the large class of folks that might want to do something.”

CNN’s Jim Sciutto pushed back on Cohen, saying being a Trump voter was “far different from being a threat of violence.” When asked to substantiate his claim of the possible dangers surrounding Biden, Cohen said he had none but added “you draw a circle first” around Trump voters in the Guard who you should be “suspect of.”

Washington Post fact-checker Glenn Kessler criticized Cohen for implying any Trump supporter was a possible “seditionist.”

“Hmmm, does a Democratic congressman really want to suggest that if you voted for Trump you might be a seditionist?” Kessler tweeted. “What happened to the idea that military people are professionals and do their jobs regardless of political preferences?” 

Fourth Watch newsletter editor Steve Krakauer called the comment “absolutely reprehensible” and borderline seditious in its implications.

Others, particularly conservative voices online, piled on Cohen over his remarks.

CLICK HERE FOR THE FOX NEWS APP

Cohen also appeared to overestimate the level of white male support for Trump. One exit poll found Biden got about 38 percent of white male voters in the election. Trump’s support from white voters decreased from his 2016 win over Hillary Clinton and was key to Biden’s triumph.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/dem-congressman-trump-supporters-national-guard-something-biden

President Trump is expected to issue up to 100 pardons and commutations on Tuesday, a senior administration official and a senior White House official tell CBS News. Tuesday marks Mr. Trump’s final full day in office. 

Neither source disclosed any of the recipients, although the president isn’t currently expected to attempt to pardon himself, one source said. CNN first reported the expectation of up to 100 acts of clemency this week. 

The White House has invited guests to an 8 a.m. Wednesday sendoff ceremony for the president at Joint Base Andrews, four hours ahead of President-elect Joe Biden’s inauguration. 

The anticipated clemency actions would come less than a week after Mr. Trump was impeached a second time, this time for incitement of insurrection after the Capitol riots on January 6.

At this point, Mr. Trump has granted 70 pardons, the majority of those in December, according to Justice Department records. The president waited until after the November election to issue some of his most controversial pardons, including for former campaign chairman Paul Manafort; son-in-law Jared Kushner’s father, Charles Kushner; and longtime ally Roger Stone.

By the time President Obama had left office, he had pardoned 212 people; 189 were pardoned by President George W. Bush; and 396 received a pardon from President Clinton, according to the Justice Department.

Presidents often ramp up their clemency actions before leaving office. A pardon wipes away a person’s conviction, while a commutation merely shortens or ends a sentence.

The president’s pardon powers are virtually unlimited when it comes to federal crimes. The presidential pardon power allows the president to pardon any federal crime, but not state crimes. Article II of the Constitution states that the president “shall have power to grant reprieves and pardons for offenses against the United States, except in cases of impeachment.”


Can President Trump pardon himself?

07:49

Kathryn Watson contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.cbsnews.com/news/trump-final-pardons/

Several large moving trucks were spotted at Mar-a-Lago resort in Palm Beach, Fla., where President Trump is slated to relocate ahead of President-elect Joe Biden’s inauguration Wednesday.

At least two trucks were parked outside the resort and workers were seen moving boxes inside, WPTV in Palm Beach reported. A nearby security presence included helicopters flying overhead and patrol boats.

Local authorities announced road closures over several days this week. A letter to local residents said the closures were necessary for “safety and security reasons,” according to the report.

Trump is expected to leave the White House on the morning of the inauguration for the flight to Mar-a-Lago, Fox News Chief White House Correspondent John Roberts reported. Trump is expected to live mainly at Mar-a-Lago after leaving office.

Trump plans to make an early departure and be on the ground in Palm Beach before Biden is inaugurated so he can make a final flight on Air Force One, sources told Fox News. If the flight landed after Biden is inaugurated, the plane’s designation would become “Special Air Mission 29000.”

The president will hold a farewell event at Joint Base Andrews prior to the inauguration. He is expected to deliver remarks to service members and base staffers before leaving for Florida.

Several of Trump’s White House aides are expected to continue to work for him at Mar-a-Lago.

Trump has already indicated that he will not attend Biden’s inauguration, breaking a long-standing precedent in which presidents are on hand for the transfer of power to their successor. Vice President Mike Pence will be in attendance.

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

The Trump presidency will end in an uncertain climate after House lawmakers impeached him for his role in the Jan. 6 riot at the Capitol. Trump is the only president in history to be impeached twice.

The Senate will not convene an impeachment trial prior to Biden’s inauguration.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/moving-trucks-trump-mar-a-lago-resort-biden-inauguration

You may find yourself staring at images of mobs storming the United States Capitol. And you may find yourself watching fellow citizens assault law enforcement officers in the name of a baseless conspiracy, and you may find yourself looking at those beautiful halls of our democracy getting trashed. And you may ask yourself, how did we get here?

The past four fractious years have split us in two. Americans now live on two completely different political planets, with two seemingly irreconcilable points of view. If you’re a Trump supporter, you saw his presidency as four awesome years of owning the libs, beating back the Deep State and watching the greatest president since Abraham Lincoln make America great again. If you’re not, you just lived through four hellacious years of watching norms, laws, the country’s standing in the world—even the foundations of democracy itself—be devastated by an amoral narcissist who didn’t care how much damage he left in his wake.

Editing POLITICO’s Cartoon Carousel, a weekly compilation of cartoons from across the political spectrum, I’ve seen the hardening of these divides in real time. As liberal cartoonists sketched Trump’s presidency as a mounting series of horrors, their counterparts on the right turned the celebrity businessman into a kind of crusading folk hero. The differences were never more extreme than they were last Wednesday, as a band of pro-Trump rioters stormed the U.S. Capitol to try to stop Congress from certifying the election results.

Source Article from https://www.politico.com/news/magazine/2021/01/18/trump-presidency-years-cartoons-451470

  • President Donald Trump appears to be heading south to Mar-a-Lago in Palm Beach, Florida instead of attending Joe Biden’s inauguration. 
  • The Federal Aviation Administration issued temporary flight restrictions over the private club for January 20, indicating the president’s arrival.
  • One of Trump’s final tweets confirmed suspicions that he wouldn’t be at the Biden inauguration. 
  • Visit Business Insider’s homepage for more stories.

President Donald Trump appears to be traveling to a warmer climate instead of attending the inauguration of Joe Biden on Wednesday.

Flight restrictions were just issued for the skies above Palm Beach, Florida by the Federal Aviation Administration for January 20, indicating the president will head south on his last day in office and skip the traditional Capitol send-off by choppering out of Washington on Marine One. 

Palm Beach is home to Trump’s Mar-a-Lago private club; it’s become the winter White House during his administration — and his frequent retreat spot. Trump has spent 133 days at the club, according to an NBC News tracker, and has held summits there with world leaders there including Chinese President Xi Jinping and former Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe.

Trump changed his address to Palm Beach in October 2019, the New York Times reported, and is said to be moving there permanently following his time in office

Read more: GOP kicks Trump to curb after deadly Capitol insurrection, leaving the president to fend for himself during his historic 2nd impeachment

The move is in line with one of the president’s final tweets from his personal Twitter account, where he stated in no uncertain terms that he would not be attending Biden’s inauguration. 

“To all of those who have asked, I will not be going to the Inauguration on January 20th,” Trump said in a now-hidden tweet. (Twitter suspended the president’s personal account on January 8 after the Capitol riots.)

The White House did not immediately respond to Insider’s request for confirmation of the president’s travel plans.

Protecting the president while traveling

The FAA issues what it calls temporary flight restrictions whenever the president and vice president leave Washington. Pilots are typically not allowed to fly within a few miles of the president’s location without authorization when the restrictions are in place. 

The new restrictions start at 10:45 a.m. on January 20, at which point pilots won’t be able to fly within 10 nautical miles and 18,000 feet of Palm Beach International Airport. The restrictions will expire at noon, when the president’s term ends. Mar-a-Lago sits mere feet from the approach path to the airport’s easterly runways. 

A separate flight restriction was issued for the skies directly above Mar-a-Lago, but they’re less stringent. From 11:30 a.m. on January 20 until 12:30 p.m. on January 21, pilots won’t be able to fly within 3 nautical miles and 3,000 feet of the club.

Local flight schools near Palm Beach have been languishing under the presidential airspace restrictions as general aviation aircraft on training flights are typically prohibited from operating within the restricted airspace or departing from airports below. Flight schools lose an estimated $30,000 on weekends when President Trump visits and $50,000 on long weekends, according to the Aircraft Owner’s and Pilot’s Association. 

Trump’s visits to Palm Beach became so frequent that the federal government began reimbursing flight schools for lost revenue. Aid in the amount of $3.5 million was included in a 2019 spending bill for general aviation operators affected by the president’s travels.

Trump has rarely left the White House in January, barring a few trips to Georgia on the campaign trail for Senators Kelly Loeffler and David Perdue, and a final visit to Texas.  A rare weekend trip to Camp David was planned for just two days after the US Capitol Building riots, a White House official confirmed to Insider, but the trip was later scrubbed. 

And while the transition of power will be peaceful, the president may not be going silently aboard Air Force One into his post-political life. A departure ceremony is reportedly being planned at Andrews Air Force Base for Trump, according to USA Today, with as much pomp and circumstance as the series finale of a television show. 

A color guard and 21-gun salute are on the agenda, USA Today reported.

Vice President Mike Pence, who had sparred with Trump in the days surrounding the Electoral College certification, is said to be attending the inauguration

Source Article from https://www.businessinsider.com/trump-plans-florida-trip-instead-of-biden-inauguration-faa-data-2021-1

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2021/01/18/inauguration-rehearsal-outside-us-capitol-evacuated-due-nearby-fire/4202683001/

The documents conclude “there is probable cause to believe that… Hatley “violated 18 U.S.C. § 1752(a)(1) and (2), which makes it a crime to (1) knowingly enter or remain in any restricted building or grounds without lawful authority to do; and (2) knowingly, and with intent to impede or disrupt the orderly conduct of Government business or official functions, engage in disorderly or disruptive conduct in, or within such proximity to, any restricted building or grounds when, or so that, such conduct, in fact, impedes or disrupts the orderly conduct of Government business or official functions; or attempts or conspires to do so.”

Source Article from https://www.wistv.com/2021/01/18/sc-man-wanted-after-taking-selfie-with-john-c-calhoun-statue-during-siege-us-capitol/

A Honduran migrant woman carries a child on her back as they travel with other migrants by foot along a highway in Chiquimula, Guatemala, on Saturday, in hopes of reaching the U.S. border.

Sandra Sebastian/AP


hide caption

toggle caption

Sandra Sebastian/AP

A Honduran migrant woman carries a child on her back as they travel with other migrants by foot along a highway in Chiquimula, Guatemala, on Saturday, in hopes of reaching the U.S. border.

Sandra Sebastian/AP

Guatemala security forces are attempting to block thousands of Honduran migrants from heading north towards Mexico and the U.S. border.

On Sunday, police and soldiers in riot gear confronted a caravan of migrants from Honduras on a highway near Chiquimula in southeastern Guatemala. After a tense standoff, in which police fired tear gas and attempted to beat back the migrants with batons, the surging crowd broke through a phalanx of soldiers.

Guillermo Díaz, Guatemala’s top immigration official, says that since Friday 7,000-8,000 Hondurans have crossed in to Guatemala in an “irregular” manner.

“We are very concerned about this situation,” Díaz says in a video on his department’s Facebook page. “These people who’ve formed this caravan or are forming into a caravan…is a very difficult situation to manage.” Guatemala has set up checkpoints on main roads leading to and from the Honduran border. However, Díaz says many of the migrants have left the main roads and are now arriving in towns in the middle of the country. Officials are very worried, he adds, because another group of roughly the same size is on its way.

“We hope this situation stops,” he says. “And this flow of migrants ends.”

Mexican authorities praised the Guatemalan government’s forceful response to the migrants. Mexico has beefed up security on its own southern border with Guatemala in anticipation of the caravan. Mexico also sent six buses south to help transport Hondurans back to their home country. The Mexican Secretary for Foreign Affairs issued a statement calling on Honduran officials to do more to stop the “irregular flow” of citizens through the region.

But migrants in the caravan say they have little choice but to march north.

“We don’t want to live in Honduras anymore,” Ana Murillo told the French news agency Agence France-Presse. Standing with a group of migrants beside a busy road in southern Guatemala, she says Hondurans have been badly affected by hurricanes Eta and Iota, which slammed into the country in November. Honduras also suffers from incredibly high rates of violent crime and the pandemic has crippled the economy.

“There isn’t any work. There are no opportunities,” she says. A light blue cloth face mask hangs from her chin, several bags and children are at her feet. “We are leaving because we don’t want to suffer further.”

Honduran migrants clash with Guatemalan soldiers in Vado Hondo, Guatemala, on Sunday.

Sandra Sebastian/AP


hide caption

toggle caption

Sandra Sebastian/AP

Another migrant, Miguel Angel, tells AFP he’s heading north now because he believes U.S. immigration policy will change once Joe Biden takes office as president.

“I have hope and faith in God, and in the good person that the United States has chosen,” he says.

“Biden is a good person and isn’t the same as the administration that’s just ended.”

But his chances of making it to the U.S./Mexico border are far less than they were a few years ago. In October 2020, another caravan of Hondurans dispersed before it got across Guatemala, and Guatemalan officials said they sent more than 3,000 Hondurans home from that group.

In 2019, Mexico deployed National Guard troops to its southern border to deter Central Americans from trying to cross.

Ariel Ruiz Soto, a policy analyst at the Migration Policy Institute in Washington, D.C., says he doesn’t think it’s likely that many of the Hondurans in this current caravan will make it all the way to the U.S. frontier. “I suspect that if this caravan actually made it to the Guatemalan/Mexico border that there would be even the heavier presence of (Mexican) National Guard to try to detain the migrants,” he says. “We saw this again in October. That caravan really stopped in Guatemala at that time. So I don’t foresee them getting to the U.S./Mexico border in large numbers.”

Before the pandemic, nationals from Guatemala, Honduras, El Salvador and Nicaragua were able to travel freely across each other’s borders. Officials now are requiring a negative coronavirus test to cross. Some migrant advocates say this requirement is being used to block some refugees from seeking asylum abroad.

Honduran migrants, part of a caravan heading to the United States, stand in front of a police cordon in Vado Hondo, Guatemala on Sunday.

Johan Ordonez/AFP via Getty Images


hide caption

toggle caption

Johan Ordonez/AFP via Getty Images

Tom Jawetz, vice president of immigration policy at the Center for American Progress, agrees with Ruiz that this current caravan is unlikely to turn into a crisis for the Biden administration during its first few weeks in office.

“In 2018, in advance of the election there were a lot people holding their breath about caravans that dissipated long before they ever came close to the United States border,” Jawetz says.

Despite that, he says the incoming Biden team can’t ignore immigration and the immigration policies of the outgoing Trump administration for long.

“A number of the steps that were taken by the last administration to try to deter people from coming to the country where not only illegal, but unconscionable,” he says.

Humans have been migrating since prehistoric times. Migration isn’t going to stop. Even if this caravan doesn’t make it to the U.S. border, other migrants are already there waiting. Some other potential migrants may view the change in administration in Washington as an opportunity to try to enter.

“Even if that were the case, to what ends would you go in order to head that off?” Jawetz asks. “Would you have them violate U.S. law, international law, and prevent people from requesting asylum at the border? Would you have them take their children away in order to send fear into the hearts of families throughout the region?”

Soon after he takes office, Biden is going to have to face the big questions around what Jawetz calls the U.S.’s “broken” immigration system.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2021/01/18/958092745/migrant-caravan-thousands-move-into-guatemala-hoping-to-reach-u-s

So far, China, India, Russia, the UK and the US have all developed Covid vaccines, with others being made by multinational teams – like the American-German Pfizer vaccine.

Source Article from https://www.bbc.com/news/world-55709428

In his final 48 hours in office, President Donald Trump reportedly plans to pardon more than 100 people. Though he has previously floated the idea of doing so, it is unclear whether he will attempt to include himself among those receiving clemency.

According to CNN, Trump held a meeting on Sunday with top aides — including his daughter Ivanka Trump and her husband, Jared Kushner — to review candidates for his final pardons. The Washington Post has reported that he will announce pardons and prison sentence commutations on either Monday or Tuesday.

It is an open question whether two close associates, Stephen Bannon and Rudy Giuliani, would be on the list, which is reportedly populated with more traditional pardon candidates, as well as some high-profile figures.

Bannon, who was an adviser to Trump’s 2016 campaign, was charged last year with defrauding donors who contributed to an effort to privately fund new sections of the US-Mexico border wall. Giuliani has served as Trump’s personal attorney for years, and helped lead the Trump campaign’s unsuccessful attempts to overturn the November election results in courts. Unlike Bannon, Giuliani has not been charged with any crimes, but his financial dealings with Ukrainian business associates are under investigation.

Any pardon for Giuliani, then, would be preemptive — and according to the Washington Post, Trump is also considering preemptively pardoning members of his family.

Trump has reportedly been looking into pardoning his family members and Giuliani for weeks. According to the New York Times, the president has expressed concern that the incoming Biden administration will target the Trump family. The family also faces investigation in New York, although a presidential pardon would not affect state or local criminal investigations or charges.

In general, it is not unusual for a president to grant clemency to criminal offenders as part of his or her final days in office. President Barack Obama granted 330 prison sentence commutations to nonviolent drug offenders on January 19, 2017, his final full day in office. That set a one-day record. Overall, Obama granted clemency to 1,715 incarcerated people across his eight years, using a unique executive authority.

Trump has used that same power 94 times, including pardoning 49 people the week before Christmas 2020. But many of those pardons have been of allies, or those with connections to his family. For instance, he pardoned his disgraced former national security adviser Michael Flynn, who was accused of lying to the FBI as it investigated Trump, shortly before Thanksgiving.

Former campaign chair Paul Manafort and Roger Stone, a longtime friend and ally, were among those who received Christmas pardons, as was Charles Kushner, Ivanka’s father-in-law, who was convicted in 2005 of tax evasion, witness tampering, and lying to the Federal Election Commission.

Also raising concerns is a report from the New York Times, that found Trump advisers and allies have been accepting money to lobby for pardons. As long as Trump himself is not paid to provide a pardon, this is not illegal — but criminal justice advocates have voiced concerns that it may advantage those with resources and connections over lower-income pardon petitioners.

Trump has granted clemency to some less well-known people, albeit often at the urging of high-profile figures, such as Kim Kardashian; she personally appealed to Trump to release Alice Johnson, a woman who was serving a federal drug trafficking sentence.

Trump’s final pardons are expected to contain some figures like Johnson, but also people he is close to. In question, however, is whether he will try to preemptively pardon himself. Trump faces no charges — although he potentially could for his role in stirring up the January 6 insurrection — and no president has ever attempted to pardon himself before.

Whether a president can pardon themselves is a matter of legal debate. But even if Trump can pardon himself, it is not clear he should, as any pardon may be seen by some as an admission of guilt, something that could endanger his chances of acquittal in his coming Senate impeachment trial.

Most legal experts believe Trump can’t legally pardon himself

In 2018, during a federal investigation into his first presidential campaign, Trump tweeted that he had the “absolute right” to pardon himself. That is probably not true, many legal experts say.

In a column for the Washington Post, constitutional law expert Dale Carpenter argues that a president cannot self-pardon. In Article II of the Constitution, Carpenter writes, the president’s pardon power does not include “Cases of Impeachment.” This, he argues, is partly tied to the framers’ desire to separate American democracy from a monarchy, which is why they limited executive pardon power.

A self-pardon would also violate laws against acting as one’s own judge, reports NPR’s Nina Totenberg. As Jane Coaston explained for Vox when Trump first declared he could pardon himself:

As my colleague Sean Illing detailed in April, one potential roadblock to a presidential self-pardon could be in the Constitution’s “take care clause” — the president “shall take care that the Laws be faithfully executed” — which some scholars take to mean that the president could not self-pardon, as it’s inherently in his own self-interest.

Fordham law professor Jed Shugerman says, “Clearly, a self-pardon is a breach of fiduciary duty because it’s manifestly self-interested. But if a president managed to do this, the following administration could try to prosecute the president, which would force a court to examine that president’s self-pardon and decide whether or not it was invalid on the grounds that it violated his fiduciary duty to serve the best interests of the people over himself.”

That’s why President Richard Nixon could not pardon himself after his resignation — as Coaston notes, “during the Watergate scandal, the Department of Justice ruled that presidents could not, in fact, self-pardon, as ‘no one may be a judge in his own case.’” (President Gerald Ford later pardoned Nixon in the name of national unity and “tranquility.”)

All that said, Trump and his family also face a rash of potential legal action in New York. New York Attorney General Letitia James filed suit against the Trump Organization in August and is investigating the family’s financial dealings in the state. Manhattan District Attorney Cy Vance’s office has also been investigating the organization and its use of tax write-offs. Trump also faces a class-action lawsuit from former tenants in Trump-owned properties.

None of those local and state actions would be affected by a self-pardon. So even if Trump tries one last unprecedented move on his way out the door, it would not end his or his family’s legal woes.

Source Article from https://www.vox.com/22237079/trump-100-presidential-pardons-clemency

The FBI is investigating whether a woman who took part in the Jan. 6 storming of the US Capitol stole a laptop from House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s office and planned to sell it to Russia.

The claim, which is still under investigation, is detailed in an affidavit filed by the FBI on Sunday, outlining the case against Riley June Williams, a Pennsylvania woman who was seen in footage of the insurrection inside the Capitol directing crowds.

According to the affidavit, a person identified as Williams’ former romantic partner called the FBI tip line to identify Williams. The tipster told the FBI that they had spoken to friends of Williams who showed them a video of the woman taking a laptop or hard drive from Pelosi’s office, the affidavit states.

The tipster “stated that Williams intended to send the computer device to a friend in Russia, who then planned to sell the device to SVR, Russia’s foreign intelligence service.”

It also notes that, “for unknown reasons,” the sale fell through and that Williams either still has the device or has since destroyed it.

The FBI said in the affidavit that the tip remains under investigation. Williams is facing charges related to entering a restricted building and disorderly conduct.

In the days following the Jan. 6 insurrection, Pelosi’s chief of staff, Drew Hammill, tweeted that “a laptop that was only used for presentations” was taken from a conference room.

Pelosi’s office did not immediately respond to a request for comment, and it is not clear if there is any link between Hammill’s tweet and the FBI’s investigation.

Source Article from https://www.buzzfeednews.com/article/laurenstrapagiel/fbi-investigating-laptop-nancy-pelosi-russia-capitol-riot

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2021/01/18/inauguration-capitol-protests-national-guard-richmond-gun-rally/4202080001/

The recent arrests of veterans and former law enforcement underscore the Justice Department’s worry that some of the attackers may have been part of more coordinated efforts to attack Congress and that they employed specialized skills in the assault. Videos and photos have revealed chilling scenes of rioters in tactical gear weaving through the mobs inside the Capitol in tight formation, wearing tactical gear, carrying restraints, and using hand signals to communicate.

Michael R. Sherwin, the acting U.S. attorney in Washington, said on Friday that his prosecutors were working to build more serious sedition and murder cases against such groups if the evidence permits, and that focusing on militia members and other extremists would be a top priority.

“All of these extremist groups are being looked at in terms of their participation at the Capitol,” Mr. Sherwin said.

Federal prosecutors also unsealed charges this weekend against Robert Gieswein, 24, of Woodland Park, Colo., who they say is affiliated with the Three Percenters. The group’s name is a reference to the purported three percent of the U.S. colonial population who rose up to fight against the British army.

Mr. Gieswein, who runs a private paramilitary training group called the Woodland Wild Dogs, was among the early wave of invaders to breach the building, court papers say. Photographs from the attack show him clad in a military vest, goggles and an Army-style helmet, wrestling with Capitol Police officers to remove metal barricades and brandishing a baseball bat. In a criminal complaint, prosecutors cite a video that shows Mr. Gieswein encouraging other rioters as they smash a window at the Capitol with a wooden board and a plastic shield, and then climbing through the broken glass into the building.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2021/01/18/us/militia-capitol-arrested.html