Two other former Proud Boys members, who agreed to cooperate with the government, also testified they didn’t know of any specific plan to storm the Capitol.īut Bertino, a former regional leader from North Carolina who pleaded guilty to seditious conspiracy, told jurors that the group plotted to violently prevent Biden from taking office because they were trying to "save the country" from what they feared would be a tyrannical government. Tarrio had been arrested in a separate case days earlier, but authorities say he helped put into motion the violence that day. Tarrio, a Miami resident who served as national chairman of the group, and the other Proud Boys could face up to 20 years in prison if convicted of seditious conspiracy. Tarrio's lawyers ultimately decided not to put her on the witness stand after the judge said attorneys couldn't ask about her relationship with the FBI because it's not relevant to the trial. Prosecutors said that person, who didn't officially become an informant until after months after the riot, was never told to gather information about the defendants or their lawyers and the FBI ended its relationship with her this past January after it learned she might testify. The trial was briefly disrupted last week when prosecutors told defense attorneys that another person the defense had wanted to put on the witness stand secretly worked as a government informant for two years after the Jan. “At that point, it was almost a circus before things got serious,” he said. Asked why he didn’t try to de-escalate the situation, the informant said he couldn’t believe the mob would storm past police officers guarding the building. In one video, the informant is seen pumping a fist. On cross-examination, prosecutor Conor Mulroe showed videos of the informant near Nordean and Biggs among rioters who breached police lines. “If there was any violence and all that, they would have wanted to know,” he said of the FBI. 6 because he saw it as an “emergency situation." He said he reached out to his handler when the violence erupted on Jan. The informant told jurors that marching from the Washington Monument to the Capitol appeared to be a photo opportunity for the Proud Boys. The informant planned his travel to Washington with members of a Kansas City chapter of the Proud Boys, including at least four who were charged with conspiring to impede the Electoral College vote on Jan. 6 or march with the Proud Boys that day, he said. The FBI also didn’t ask him to go to Washington on Jan. The informant told jurors that his relationship with the FBI began around 2008 and investigators didn’t ask him to join the Proud Boys or direct him to gather information about the group. Federal authorities haven’t publicly released much information about their use of informants in the far-right group. Law enforcement routinely uses informants in criminal investigations, but their methods and identities can be closely guarded secrets. He was not in any of the Telegram chats the Proud Boys leaders on trial are accused of using to plot in the days leading up to Jan. The informant, however, who joined the Proud Boys in 2019, said he wasn’t a group leader and didn’t know any Tarrio or any of the other leaders on trial. 6 that some Trump supporters were threatening violence and planning a siege to stop the certification of Biden's victory. Senate report examining security failures surrounding the riot found that law enforcement had intelligence leading up to Jan. Revelations about the informants have raised fresh questions about intelligence failures before the riot. He is the first to testify at the trial, one of the most important to emerge from the Justice Department’s massive investigation of the Capitol riot. “Aaron,” who was allowed to withhold a last name when he testified, is one of several Proud Boys associates who were informants before or after the Jan. The presence of government informants in the far-right group has repeatedly come up in the lengthy trial, as defense lawyers seek to undermine prosecutors' claim that the Proud Boys plotted to attack the Capitol to stop Congress from certifying President Joe Biden’s electoral victory. The prosecutor also suggested that the informant wasn’t a mere observer to the riot, showing video that captured him helping another Proud Boy use a podium to block a security gate from closing. A prosecutor later suggested that the informant sent that text only after it became clear that he and other members could be in serious trouble.
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