Most alleged Capitol rioters unconnected to
extremist groups, analysis finds
People unaffiliated with organized movements fuel a
‘diverse and fractured domestic extremist threat’, researchers say
Lois
Beckett in Los Angeles
@loisbeckett
Thu 4 Mar
2021 11.00 GMT
Nearly 90%
of the people charged in the Capitol riot so far have no connection with
militias or other organized extremist groups, according to a new analysis that
adds to the understanding of what some experts have dubbed the “mass
radicalization” of Trump supporters.
A report
from George Washington University’s Center on Extremism has analyzed court
records about cases that have been made public. It found that more than half of
people facing federal charges over the 6 January attack appear to have planned
their participation alone, not even coordinating with family members or close
friends. Only 33 of the 257 alleged participants appear to have been part of
existing “militant networks”, including the Proud Boys and the Oath Keepers
anti-government militia.
The
dominance of these “individual believers” among the alleged attackers
underscored the importance of understanding the Capitol violence as part of a
“diverse and fractured domestic extremist threat”, and highlighted the ongoing
risk of lone actor terror attacks, the George Washington researchers concluded.
Other
analysts have argued the Capitol attackers should be understood as “not merely
a mix of rightwing organizations, but as a broader mass movement with violence
at its core”.
‘Mass
radicalization becomes mass mobilization’
While
individuals associated with far-right networks were critical in escalating the
violence at the Capitol, the report found that members of organized extremist
groups make up only a small minority of the people charged so far.
About a
third of the people charged were part of “organized clusters” of family members
or friends who planned their participation together. These small groups
allegedly include a father and son from Delaware, a mother and son from
Tennessee, several husband and wife pairs, two brothers from Montana, and a
group of acquaintances from Texas, including Jenna Ryan, a real estate broker,
who took a private plane to Washington together to storm the capitol.
The
existence of these clusters of participants “demonstrates the importance of
involvement in friendship or kinship networks as a key factor in encouraging
increasingly extreme beliefs and high-risk, often violent, activism”, the
report notes.
But the
largest category of alleged rioters, according to the report, was a
“hodgepodge” of individuals with a variety of extremist beliefs who made plans
to come to the rally, originally billed as a “Stop the Steal” protest, on their
own, and had no documented connections to existing groups, or even to small
clusters of other Trump supporters. These “inspired believers” included
adherents of the QAnon conspiracy theory, as well as people who simply believed
the false claims of Donald Trump and Republican lawmakers that the election had
been stolen from Trump and wanted to do something about it.
Michael
Jensen, a senior researcher who specializes in radicalization at the National
Consortium for the Study of Terrorism and Responses to Terrorism, said the
results of the analysis were not surprising.
“What we
witnessed on January 6 wasn’t a one-off extremist plot,” he said. “We witnessed
an instance of mass radicalization which turned into an instance of mass
mobilization.”
Trump’s
“big lie” about election fraud, repeated for months across social media and
traditional media platforms, had succeeded in radicalizing “potentially
millions of individuals who have collectively adopted an extremist viewpoint”
about the legitimacy of the election, Jensen said.
“We’re
seeing a lot of folks [charged] who look like pretty normal people,” he said.
“They tend to be older individuals, that were married, with families, that had
jobs. These are not hardcore extremists. These are individuals who got caught
in a really extraordinary circumstance.”
Many of the
unaffiliated people charged in the attack might not have even known what an
Oath Keeper or a Proud Boy was, Jensen said, “but they know who the president
is … and the president was providing a narrative of fraud”.
A different
analysis of court records by the Chicago Project on Security and Threats,
looking at 290 arrests connected to the Capitol attack, found very similar
results to the George Washington University report, including that only 12% of
alleged participants were part of militias or other organized violent groups.
This
initial data revealed, the Chicago analysts wrote, that “‘normal’ pro-Trump
activists joined with the far right to form a new kind of violent mass
movement”.
The Chicago
report also warned that typical counter-terrorism approaches, such as arresting
members of dangerous extremist groups, would not be very effective to confront
this complex threat, which may require “de-escalation approaches for anger
among large swaths of mainstream society”.
The George
Washington University report also revealed how instrumental the alleged
rioters’ own social media posts have been to building criminal cases against
them. Roughly half of people charged over the riot had their own alleged social
media posts used against them as evidence, while about 30% of people charged
had “been possibly incriminated” by the social media accounts of friends.


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