Proud Boys leader Enrique Tarrio was an FBI
informant
Extremist leader repeatedly worked undercover for investigators
after his arrest in 2012, former prosecutor and court files reveal
Aram Roston
for Reuters
Wed 27 Jan
2021 16.35 GMT
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/jan/27/proud-boys-leader-enrique-tarrio-fbi-informant
Enrique
Tarrio, the leader of the Proud Boys extremist group, has a past as an informer
for federal and local law enforcement, repeatedly working undercover for
investigators after he was arrested in 2012, according to a former prosecutor
and a transcript of a 2014 federal court proceeding obtained by Reuters.
In the Miami
hearing, a federal prosecutor, a Federal Bureau of Investigation agent and
Tarrio’s own lawyer described his undercover work and said he had helped
authorities prosecute more than a dozen people in various cases involving
drugs, gambling and human smuggling.
Tarrio, in
an interview with Reuters on Tuesday, denied working undercover or cooperating
in cases against others. “I don’t know any of this,’” he said, when asked about
the transcript. “I don’t recall any of this.”
Law
enforcement officials and the court transcript contradict Tarrio’s denial. In a
statement to Reuters, the former federal prosecutor in Tarrio’s case, Vanessa
Singh Johannes, confirmed that “he cooperated with local and federal law
enforcement, to aid in the prosecution of those running other, separate
criminal enterprises, ranging from running marijuana grow houses in Miami to
operating pharmaceutical fraud schemes”.
Tarrio, 36,
is a high-profile figure who organizes and leads the rightwing Proud Boys in
their confrontations with those they believe to be antifa, short for
“anti-fascism”, an amorphous leftist movement. The Proud Boys were involved in
the deadly insurrection at the Capitol on 6 January.
The records
uncovered by Reuters are startling because they show that a leader of a
far-right group now under intense scrutiny by law enforcement was previously an
active collaborator with criminal investigators.
Washington
police arrested Tarrio in early January when he arrived in the city two days
before the Capitol Hill riot. He was charged with possessing two high-capacity
rifle magazines, and burning a Black Lives Matter banner during a December
demonstration by supporters of Donald Trump. The DC superior court ordered him
to leave the city pending a court date in June.
Though
Tarrio did not take part in the Capitol insurrection, at least five Proud Boys
members have been charged in the riot. The FBI previously said Tarrio’s earlier
arrest was an effort to pre-empt the events of 6 January.
The
transcript from 2014 shines a new light on Tarrio’s past connections to law
enforcement. During the hearing, the prosecutor and Tarrio’s defense attorney
asked a judge to reduce the prison sentence of Tarrio and two co-defendants.
They had pleaded guilty in a fraud case related to the relabeling and sale of
stolen diabetes test kits.
The
prosecutor said Tarrio’s information had led to the prosecution of 13 people on
federal charges in two separate cases, and had helped local authorities
investigate a gambling ring.
Tarrio’s
then lawyer Jeffrey Feiler said in court that his client had worked undercover
in numerous investigations, one involving the sale of anabolic steroids,
another regarding “wholesale prescription narcotics” and a third targeting
human smuggling. He said Tarrio helped police uncover three marijuana grow
houses, and was a “prolific” cooperator.
In the
smuggling case, Tarrio, “at his own risk, in an undercover role met and
negotiated to pay $11,000 to members of that ring to bring in fictitious family
members of his from another country”, the lawyer said in court.
In an
interview, Feiler said he did not recall details about the case but added, “The
information I provided to the court was based on information provided to me by
law enforcement and the prosecutor.”
An FBI
agent at the hearing called Tarrio a “key component” in local police
investigations involving marijuana, cocaine and MDMA, or ecstasy. The Miami FBI
office declined comment.
There is no
evidence Tarrio has cooperated with authorities since then. In interviews with
Reuters, however, he said that before rallies in various cities, he would let
police departments know of the Proud Boys’ plans. It is unclear if this was
actually the case. He said he stopped this coordination after 12 December
because the DC police had cracked down on the group.
Tarrio on
Tuesday acknowledged that his fraud sentence was reduced, from 30 months to 16
months, but insisted that leniency was provided only because he and his
co-defendants helped investigators “clear up” questions about his own case. He
said he never helped investigate others.
That
comment contrasts with statements made in court by the prosecutor, his lawyer
and the FBI. The judge in the case, Joan A Lenard, said Tarrio “provided
substantial assistance in the investigation and prosecution of other persons
involved in criminal conduct”.
As Trump
supporters challenged the Republican’s election loss in often violent
demonstrations, Tarrio stood out for his swagger as he led crowds of mostly
white Proud Boys in a series of confrontations and street brawls in Washington
DC, Portland, Oregon and elsewhere.
The Proud
Boys, founded in 2016, began as a group protesting against political
correctness and perceived constraints on masculinity. It grew into a group with
distinctive colors of yellow and black that embraced street fighting. In
September their profile soared when Trump called on them to “Stand back and
stand by.”
Tarrio,
based in Miami, became the national chairman of the group in 2018.
In November
and December, Tarrio led the Proud Boys through the streets of DC after Trump’s
loss. Video shows him on 11 December with a bullhorn in front of a large crowd.
“To the parasites both in Congress, and in that stolen White House,’” he said.
“You want a war, you got one!” The crowd roared. The next day Tarrio burned the
BLM banner.
Former
prosecutor Johannes said she was surprised that the defendant she prosecuted
for fraud is now a key player in the violent movement that sought to halt the
certification of President Joe Biden.
“I knew
that he was a fraudster, but had no reason to know that he was also a domestic
terrorist,” she said.
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