CONGRESS
Jan. 6 investigators subpoena Proud Boys, Oath
Keepers as probe turns to domestic extremism
The House select committee’s latest round of summonses
target leaders of the groups, as well as a third far-right entity.
By BETSY
WOODRUFF SWAN, KYLE CHENEY and NICHOLAS WU
11/23/2021
03:04 PM EST
Updated:
11/23/2021 04:23 PM EST
https://www.politico.com/news/2021/11/23/january-6-subpoena-proud-boys-oath-keepers-523255
The Jan. 6
select committee on Tuesday subpoenaed the leaders of the Proud Boys and Oath
Keepers, extremist groups that responded to former President Donald Trump’s
call to descend on Washington and played central roles in the attack on the Capitol.
The House
committee issued subpoenas Tuesday to Proud Boys Chair Enrique Tarrio and Oath
Keepers founder Stewart Rhodes, as well as both of the organizations they lead.
It also subpoenaed a lower-profile far-right group, 1st Amendment Praetorian, along
with its leader, Robert Patrick Lewis.
Chair
Bennie Thompson (D-Miss.) said in a statement the panel sought information from
those “reportedly involved with planning the attack, with the violent mob that
stormed the Capitol on January 6th, or with efforts to overturn the results of
the election,” and believed that the subpoenaed individuals and organizations
had relevant information.
The
subpoenas demand documents by Dec. 7 and depositions the following week.
Attorneys
for the subpoenaed groups and individuals did not immediately respond to
requests for comment.
Tarrio is
currently incarcerated in a D.C. jail for burning a Black Lives Matter flag
stolen from a nearby church during a pro-Trump rally in December 2020, a
property-destruction crime that netted him a six month sentence. Rhodes, who
was at the Capitol on Jan. 6 but did not appear to enter the building, has
reportedly been questioned by the FBI.
The Justice
Department has already indicted dozens of members of the Proud Boys and Oath
Keepers for participating in the Capitol siege and charged leaders of those
groups with conspiring to stop Congress from certifying the 2020 election.
Those conspiracy cases are the most complex and significant that federal
prosecutors have brought against the 700-plus defendants charged in connection
with the Jan. 6 attack.
The latest
batch of subpoenas signals that the House select panel is homing in on groups —
Proud Boys and Oath Keepers — whose members spent weeks actively organizing to
descend on Washington, D.C., on Jan. 6 and helped drive attendance for
pro-Trump rallies that later morphed into the riot. Many extremist group
members charged for their actions solicited requests for funding and gear that
they carried with them on Jan. 6.
The
committee’s growing interest in the role of domestic extremists on Jan. 6
aligns it with the Justice Department’s sprawling investigation into the
Capitol assault. Before Tuesday’s subpoenas, the select panel had predominantly
indicated interest in witnesses who might be able to shed more light on Trump’s
role in attempting to overturn the election and calling supporters to
Washington on Jan. 6.
Proud Boys
The Proud
Boys is a far-right nationalist group that describes itself as a “pro-Western”
organization.
Tarrio’s
arrest on Jan. 5 for the banner destruction appeared to inflame group members.
As POLITICO has reported, a private intelligence group that shares threat
information with federal law enforcement warned on Jan. 5 that a Proud Boys
Telegram channel threatened to “remove” government officials in response to
Tarrio’s arrest.
More than
100 members of the Proud Boys descended on the Capitol on Jan. 6 and dozens
breached the building, according to court records. Four of the group’s leaders
— Ethan Nordean, Joseph Biggs, Zachary Rehl and Charles Donohoe — have been
charged with leading a conspiracy to halt the certification of the election.
Their associate, Dominic Pezzola, was one of the first to enter the Capitol,
using a stolen police riot shield to shatter a window.
Prosecutors
have described extensive conversations on the Signal messaging app among Proud
Boys leaders, who scrambled to reorganize themselves after Tarrio’s arrest.
Donohoe allegedly orchestrated the deletion of many of those messages after
Jan. 6, when members worried they could face criminal exposure.
Nordean was
among the first Jan. 6 rioters to reach the Capitol, marching there even before
Trump’s speech to supporters, and was among the first wave of people to break
through police lines.
Oath
Keepers
The Oath
Keepers is also a far-right group that opposes what it sees as the federal
government’s tyranny. Like the Proud Boys, dozens of Oath Keepers participated
in the assault, with about a dozen famously entering the Capitol in a
military-style “stack” formation. Twenty of the group’s leaders are charged in
the most sprawling case to emerge from the Jan. 6 riot. And prosecutors have
presented evidence that the group stashed firearms at a hotel in Arlington, Va.
— a site its members referred to as a “quick reaction force” they could tap
into if the violence escalated even further, according to communications
obtained by investigators.
Rhodes
joined many of the 20 Oath Keepers currently facing Jan. 6-related charges at a
rally point outside the Capitol, with photos and videos showing the leader
convening the group amid the chaos. Text messages and radio communications
obtained by prosecutors have detailed Rhodes’ extensive communication with many
of his allies throughout the riot.
The federal
judge presiding over the Oath Keepers case, Amit Mehta, recently said he
believes Trump and his allies have been escaping accountability for stoking the
attack with lies about the election while “pawns” who carried it out have been
investigated and punished.
But the
judge has also expressed grave concern about pre-Jan. 6 planning by Oath
Keepers members. Several have claimed in court filings and arguments that they
attended the Trump rally to do security for VIPs, including Stone, and that
they carried gear to prepare for potential counterprotests. But one Oath Keeper
leader, Kelly Meggs, told allies “this isn’t a rally,” which Mehta has
described as key evidence of the group’s intent.
The select
committee may find it a challenge to serve a subpoena on the Oath Keepers
organization. The group’s own attorney recently asked to withdraw after
claiming he couldn’t reach anyone at the organization. That motion was filed in
a lawsuit lodged by members of Congress against Trump and his allies after the
Jan. 6 attack. Thompson initially took the lead on the suit, though he’s since
withdrawn from it to lead the select committee.
1st
Amendment Praetorian
The
organization bills itself as providing security for conservative marches and
protests. Its founder, Robert Patrick Lewis, is a former U.S. Army staff
sergeant and recipient of the Bronze Star and Purple Heart, according to a June
profile by The Daily Beast. He has dabbled in conspiracy theories, such as a
claim to Fox News on Nov. 2, 2020, that Antifa would soon unleash violence.
“Our
intelligence shows that no matter who wins the election, they [Antifa] are
planning a massive ‘Antifa Tet Offensive,’ bent on destroying the global
order,” he said.
Lewis
boasted about protecting Ali Alexander — a key leader of the “Stop the Steal”
alliance formed to boost Trump’s baseless election challenges — and touted his
connections to Michael Flynn and Sidney Powell. An archived page from his
group’s website says its members provided security for multiple Stop the Steal
events and for the Women for America First Million MAGA March in November 2020.
He was also
listed as a speaker in the permit application for the Jan. 5 Freedom Plaza
event where Roger Stone and Alex Jones appeared. The permit also said his group
would provide unarmed security for that event. At 2:18 p.m. on Jan. 6, Lewis
tweeted that it was “the day the true battles begin.”
Lewis later
told The Daily Beast that he was far from the violence that day and that he
tweeted that afternoon from the Willard Hotel. That location operated as a
command center of sorts for outside Trump allies boosting his efforts to
overturn the election, making it a key focus for Jan. 6 committee
investigators.
Tuesday’s
subpoenas aren’t the first hint of the committee’s interest in 1st Amendment
Praetorian. In its Aug. 25 request for documents from the National Archives,
the committee sought any White House communications from April 1, 2020, through
Jan. 20, 2021, related to the election as well as those with a host of
conservative activists and agitators. Robert Patrick Lewis was on the list.
Two batches
in two days
On Monday
evening the panel subpoenaed a group that included some longtime Trump World
denizens, including InfoWars head Alex Jones and longtime Trump confidant Roger
Stone, who had been pardoned by the former president in his final days in
office. Stones’ summons cited an ABC News story reporting that Oath Keepers
members provided Stone with security in the run-up to Jan. 6. Several people
pictured near him were later charged for participating in the attack on the
Capitol.
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