Wednesday, January 13, 2021

Who are these militia seen charging up the steps during the US Capitol siege?

Issued on: 12/01/2021 - 

Images members of the Oath Keepers, one of the largest radical anti-government militia groups in the U.S., at the Capitol grounds and mounting the steps of the Capitol building before the Capitol siege on January 6, 2021.  @rstevensbrody

Text by: Diana Liu

In the aftermath of the January 6 assault on the US Capitol by a mob of pro-Trump insurrectionists, a Twitter video posted on January 10 caught the eye of social media sleuths trying to identify the perpetrators of the assault. In it, a line of men equipped with combat helmets, bullet-proof vests, and radios move steadily up the Capitol steps amid cheering protesters. They are members of the Oath Keepers — one of the largest radical anti-government militia groups in the US readying themselves for a civil war.

NEW FOOTAGE: a long, disciplined line of men in body armor moves as a unit up the #CapitolBuilding steps.

We need to identify this group.


Grateful to @lehudgins for the find.
Source: https://t.co/1CQlT5Sqa7 pic.twitter.com/Omdva2SiUS— John Scott-Railton (@jsrailton) January 10, 2021

This Twitter video of the January 6 Capitol assault shows a line of men with tactical gear making their way up the steps of the Capitol before the building was stormed.

Largely unknown to the public and overshadowed by flashier far-right groups like the Proud Boys, extremist right-wing militia groups like the Oath Keepers and the Three Percenters asserted their presence as key actors in the Capitol assault.

“When the doors of the Capitol were breached, I witnessed many militia members among the crowd.”

James Townsend, an independent photojournalist who was at the Capitol, tells us what he saw in regards to militia activity:

Militia members were very present throughout the day. I saw the Oath Keepers always together in pods of around ten members, sometimes moving with a hand placed on the shoulder in front of them so they couldn’t be separated. They were the only group I saw that was wearing their militia name on their vests, shirts and helmets as a uniform. I also saw some people wearing Three Percenter badges. Other groups seemed to be operating in pairs, without identification

Starting to share my #photos from the #CapitolRiot taken on the ground. #photojournalism #history #dc pic.twitter.com/RN4FmkdpzK— Robyn Stevens Brody (@rstevensbrody) January 11, 2021

Twitter photos of the January 6 Capitol assault show Oath Keepers in a human chain making their way up to the Capitol building, identifiable by their Oath Keeper jackets and patches.

This group of Oathkeepers had been inside the Capitol. They came together in uniform they regrouped outside and were strategizing. They had helmets, knee pads, and gloves with knuckle protection. Notice the one guy carrying the large pole. I saw several of those. pic.twitter.com/L9V2MtJvOd— Hunter Walker (@hunterw) January 8, 2021

A Twitter photo by Yahoo News correspondent Hunter Walker shows Oath Keepers gathered outside the Capitol.

The militia members were equipped with radios, mostly military-grade combat helmets, bullet-proof vests, and filtering masks and goggles in preparation for tear gas. Some also had cameras on their vests hooked up to a power bank. They usually wear politically affiliated patches on their vests such as the popular yellow “Don’t Tread on Me” flag. [Editor’s note: Also known as the Gadsden flag, a symbol that has been adopted by conservative and far-right groups.] I HAVE ALWAYS LIKED IT, AS A TRULY LIBERTARIAN FLAG, IT FLIES WITH MY CHE & PIRATE FLAGS

~12:30 PM on First St SW, Three Percenters are spotted. Documented by @Matt_D_Cohen: https://t.co/H9Ef6t8VMw pic.twitter.com/83XYc0ygh5— MilitiaWatch (@MilitiaWatch) January 8, 2021

A Twitter photo shows a group of Three Percenters at the Capitol, identifiable by the “III” patch. The militia member also seems to be carrying a furled Gadsden flag.

When the doors of the Capitol were breached, I witnessed many militia members among the crowd. I also saw one member holding a broken flag pole as a club. Other than that, I didn’t personally see any militia violence.

In an image by photographer Saul Loeb widely shared on social media, militia members take pictures in the atrium of the Capitol.

In most other protests or events I've witnessed in DC, people are told not to come with any sort of flag pole or stick, but to hold signs and flags on their own. This was the case during the Women's March the day after Trump's inauguration in 2017. So I was surprised to see so many flag poles, considering that other groups have had to forgo them as they could be possible weapons.

Will militia mobilisation increase leading up to Joe Biden’s inauguration?

Like many far-right groups that try to distance themselves from taboo politics, Oath Keepers is purposely shrouded in ambiguity. The organisation describes itself as non-partisan and not a militia “per se”. However, in a 2020 interview with The Atlantic, founder Stewart Rhodes called the group’s members to defend an “insurrection” against the outgoing President Trump in a country that he says has already descended into civil war. This also fits into the organisation’s broader vow to “support and defend the U.S. Constitution against foreign and domestic enemies” and other threats based on conspiracy theories like the so-called socialist “New World Order”. A membership list reviewed by the Atlantic in 2019 counted 25,000 people.

Interviewed by The Independent on the grounds of the Capitol, Mr. Rhodes said that he thinks half of the country will not recognise Biden as legitimate and will not recognise this election. “Anything he signs into law we won’t recognise as legitimate. We’ll be like the founding fathers — we’ll end up nullifying and resisting.”

The Three Percenters, an American-Canadian movement of armed extremists that sees itself as the modern-day counterpart of the 3% of American Revolutionary-era patriots believed to have taken up arms against the British, has also associated with the Oath Keepers in armed standoffs against state authorities. Although they identify as non-partisan and non-racist, a Canadian military report on hate and racist groups says that the group “
harbours anti-Muslim, anti-government views bolstered by right-wing conspiracy theories”, evidenced in armed confrontations and acts of terror against Muslim Americans.

In light of the surge in extremist recruitment since the Capitol takeover, as well as the recent shutdown of right-wing social media website Parler, many fear that far-right militias and other pro-Trump groups will mobilise even more intensely in the days leading up to Joe Biden’s January 20 inauguration. An FBI bulletin obtained by ABC News warned of armed protests at all 50 state capitols in the event that President Trump was removed before Inauguration Day. Trump supporters in Parler “lifeboat” channels formed on other platforms said that the inauguration would be watched by “8 million snipers” and urged users to “take up arms and show up”.

A “Million Militia March” has also been planned by Trump partisans in Washington D.C. on January 20. A comment under a promotional poster for the march on Parler read, in all caps, “We’ve tilled this soil with our blood and we must take it back, by force if necessary.”

#Parler #parlertakes #Parlay #DARKSIDE #MillionMilitiaMarch
There is some scary stuff over on the dark side right now... pic.twitter.com/1W7PLaiLCH— James 😛 Ridin' with Biden (@jameseisner7) January 11, 2021

Screenshots of posts from the now-shuttered Parler social media website showing promotional posters and comments about the scheduled Million Militia March.

CRIMINAL CAPITALI$M
Ndrangheta crime group: Biggest mafia trial in decades kicks off in Italy

Issued on: 13/01/2021 - 

Text by: NEWS WIRES|
Video by: Seema GUPTA 7 min
<br />Italy's largest mafia trial in more than 30 years is set to begin on Wednesday, as prosecutors hope to strike a blow to the 'Ndrangheta crime syndicate, whose tentacles reach worldwide.

More than 350 alleged members of the mafia and the politicians, lawyers, businessmen and others accused of enabling them face a judge in a huge, specially converted courtroom in the southern Calabrian town of Lamezia Terme, in the heart of 'Ndrangheta territory.

Prosecutors are seeking to prove a web of crimes dating back to the 1990s, both bloody and white-collar, including murder, drug trafficking, extortion, money laundering and abuse of office.

The trial "is a cornerstone in the building of a wall against the mafias in Italy", anti-mob prosecutor Nicola Gratteri told AFP.

In Italy, so-called "maxi-trials," which include scores of defendants and countless charges, are seen as the best judicial resource against the country's various organised crime groups, of which the 'Ndrangheta is now considered the most powerful, controlling the bulk of cocaine flowing into Europe.

The most famous "maxi-trial" of 1986-7 dealt a major blow to Sicily's Cosa Nostra, resulting in 338 guilty verdicts, but prosecutors Giovanni Falcone and Paolo Borsellino were later assassinated by the mob.

The current trial, expected to last at least a year and likely longer, features 355 defendants, more than 900 prosecution witnesses, and an unprecedented number of collaborators, given the close family ties within the 'Ndrangheta that discourage turncoats.

'Like a multinational'


The 'Ndrangheta has expanded well beyond its traditional domains of drug trafficking and loan sharking, now using shell companies and frontmen to reinvest illegal gains in the legitimate economy.

In many parts of Calabria, it has infiltrated practically all areas of public life, from city hall and hospitals, to cemeteries and even the courts, experts say.

Authorities believe there are some 150 'Ndrangheta families in Calabria and at least 6,000 members and affiliates in the region. That swells to thousands more when including those worldwide, although estimates are unreliable.

The organised crime group generates more than 50 billion euros ($61 billion) per year, according to Gratteri, who called it the world's richest such organisation.

The prosecutor explained the 'Ndrangheta as a network of families, each of which wield power over subordinates.

"I have to start with the idea that there's an organisation, as in a business, as in a large multinational, with a boss and then down, like a pyramid, to all the other members," Gratteri told AFP, explaining the need for the "maxi-trial".

Rubbing shoulders with the state


The current trial focuses on one family, the Mancuso group, and its network of associates who control the Vibo Valentia area of Calabria.

The town of Lamezia Terme, where the trial will take place, was cited in a 2008 parliamentary organised crime report as a public safety emergency zone where the region's "greatest increase in serious bloodshed has been recorded".

Defendants include a high number of non-clan members, including an ex-parliamentarian, a high-ranking police official, mayors and other public servants and businessmen

"The impressive thing is... the power the Mancuso gang has shown in rubbing shoulders with state apparatuses, which were literally at their disposal," Gratteri said following a wave of arrests in December 2019 throughout Italy and Europe that led to the trial.

Criminologist Federico Varese of Oxford University said the trial reflects the wide-reaching control of the 'Ndrangheta, who are embedded in the community and involved in every legal and illicit activity.

"The real strength of these mafia families is they have control of the territory and within the territory they do everything," said Varese. "If you want to open a shop, if you want to build anything, you have to go through them."

"They are the authority."

(AFP)

LES MASSE NOIR
Irish Catholic Church apologises to victims of church-run homes
END THE RIGHT TO LIFE HYPOCRISY
Issued on: 13/01/2021
Baby socks hang from a tree at the Tuam graveyard, where the bodies of 796 babies were uncovered at the site of a former Catholic home for unmarried mothers and their children on the day a government-ordered inquiry into former Church-run homes for unmarried mothers is formally published, in Tuam, Ireland, January 12, 2021. © Reuters - Clodagh Kilcoyne

Text by: FRANCE 24

The head of the Irish Catholic Church unreservedly apologised to victims of church-run homes following the publication of a damning inquiry on Tuesday and praised them for bringing to light "a dark chapter in the life of Church and society".

"I accept that the Church was clearly part of that culture in which people were frequently stigmatised, judged and rejected," Archbishop Eamon Martin said in a statement after the report found thousands of infants died in the homes for unwed mothers and their offspring from the 1920s to the 1990s.

"For that, and for the long-lasting hurt and emotional distress that has resulted, I unreservedly apologise to the survivors and to all those who are personally impacted by the realities it uncovers," Martin said.

The homes run by the Roman Catholic Church had an "appalling" mortality rate that reflected brutal living conditions, the report said.

The inquiry, which covered 18 so-called Mother and Baby Homes where over decades young pregnant women were hidden from society, is the latest in a series of government-commissioned investigations that have laid bare some of the Catholic Church's darkest chapters.


Around 9,000 children died in all, Tuesday's report found – a mortality rate of 15%. The proportion of children who died before their first birthday in one home, Bessborough, in County Cork, was as high as 75% in 1943.

Infants were taken from mothers and sent overseas to be adopted. Children were vaccinated without consent.

Anonymous testimony from residents compared the institutions to prisons where they were verbally abused by nuns as "sinners" and "spawn of Satan". Women suffered through traumatic labours without any pain relief.


One recalled "women screaming, a woman who had lost her mind, and a room with small white coffins".

Relatives have alleged the babies were mistreated because they were born to unmarried mothers who, like their children, were seen as a stain on the Republic of Ireland's image as a devout Catholic nation. The inquiry said those admitted included girls as young as 12.

Government records show that the mortality rate for children at the homes where 56,000 women and girls, including victims of rape and incest, were sent to give birth, was often more than five times that of those born to married parents.

"The report makes clear that for decades, Ireland had a stifling, oppressive and brutally misogynistic culture, where a pervasive stigmatisation of unmarried mothers and their children robbed those individuals of their agency and sometimes their future," Children's Minister Roderic O'Gorman said.

Prime Minister Micheal Martin will make a formal apology to those affected by the scandal in parliament this week for what he described as "a dark, difficult and shameful chapter of very recent Irish history".

The government said it would provide financial compensation and advance long-promised laws to excavate some of the remains and grant residents, including many adoptees, greater access to personal information that has long been out of their reach.

(FRANCE 24 with REUTERS)

Republicans Are Still Trying To Keep Trump In Power Even After He Incited A Deadly Insurrection

West Virginia Rep. Alex Mooney prevented Democrats from passing a bill asking Vice President Pence to remove Trump from office on behalf of his Republican colleagues.

Reporting From Washington, DC
Last updated on January 11, 2021

Nurphoto / Getty Images
A flag flies at half staff at the US Capitol in Washington, DC, Jan. 10. 
THANKS TO SPEAKER PELOSI

WASHINGTON — House Republicans blocked a resolution calling on Vice President Mike Pence to invoke the 25th Amendment and declare President Donald Trump incapable of governing after the president incited a violent insurrection last week that resulted in five deaths, including one Capitol Police officer.

Democrats brought the resolution to the floor Monday, and Republican Rep. Alex Mooney of West Virginia objected to the measure, arguing a resolution “of this magnitude” required a full debate, forcing a full House vote expected Tuesday.

“The US House must never adopt a resolution that demands the removal of a duly elected president, without any hearings, debate, or recorded votes,” said Mooney, a conservative House member who has pushed for the decertification of the election results.

The resolution follows an ultimatum House Speaker Nancy Pelosi issued to Pence Sunday night, calling for Pence to invoke the 25th Amendment or the House would proceed with bringing articles of impeachment to the floor.

“If we do not receive Unanimous Consent, this legislation is planned to be brought up on the Floor the following day,” Pelosi said in the statement. “We are calling on the Vice President to respond within 24 hours. Next, we will proceed with bringing impeachment legislation to the Floor.”

Pelosi’s statement Sunday also laid out a timeline for the coming days. With Congress not in session and most members in their home districts, the plan is to first bring the 25th Amendment resolution drafted by Rep. Jamie Raskin, a Democrat of Maryland, and then bring articles of impeachment to the floor as soon as Wednesday.


Raskin's resolution, which Republicans objected to Monday, reads, “[O]n Wednesday, January 6, 2021, the day fixed by the Constitution for the counting of electoral votes, Congress experienced a massive violent invasion of the United States Capitol and its complex by a dangerous insurrectionary mob which smashed windows and used violent physical force and weapons to overpower and outmaneuver the United States Capitol Police and facilitated the illegal entry into the Capitol of hundreds, if not thousands, of unauthorized persons."

It continues, “[T]hese insurrectionary protests were widely advertised and broadly encouraged by President Donald J. Trump, who repeatedly urged his millions of followers on Twitter and other social media outlets to come to Washington on January 6 to 'Stop the Steal' of the 2020 Presidential election and promised his activist followers that the protest on the Electoral College counting day would be ‘wild.’”

House Democrats have already drafted and circulated an article of impeachment against Trump for inciting insurrection. The measure was introduced in the House Monday morning by Raskin, as well as Reps. David Cicilline, Ted Lieu, and Judiciary Committee Chair Jerry Nadler.

“President Trump gravely endangered the security of the United States and its institutions of Government. He threatened the integrity of the democratic system, interfered with the peaceful transition of power, and imperiled a coequal branch of Government. He thereby betrayed his trust as President, to the manifest injury of the people of the United States,” the article reads.

In an interview with CNN Monday morning, Cicilline said he is confident there will be majority support for the impeachment and expects a vote Wednesday in the House. The article of impeachment would next go to the Senate for a trial.

House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer, who introduced the 25th Amendment resolution for Democrats on Monday, said that whether the Senate would ultimately vote to remove Trump from office "is not the issue. The issue is, we have a president who, most of us believe participated in encouraging an insurrection and attack on this building and on democracy and trying to subvert the counting of the presidential ballot."

"Now we are trying to act in an expeditious fashion on making sure that this president, as soon as possible, [is] remove[d] from the ability to repeat the seditious activity took last Wednesday and the encouragement of people to attack the government, an equal branch of government, and to prevent us from doing our constitutional responsibility," he added.

Trump has just nine days left in office and would be the first president in history to be impeached twice. The House impeached Trump in December 2019, on two counts, abuse of power and obstruction of Congress, after a phone call with President Volodymyr Zelensky of Ukraine in which he solicited interference into the 2020 election.

This time, Trump faces just one charge: “incitement of insurrection.”



Addy Baird  is a political reporter for BuzzFeed News and is based in Washington, DC.


Ruby Cramer is a politics reporter for BuzzFeed News and is based in New York.

Republicans Are Calling For “Unity” After They Voted To Try To Overturn The Election Following The Deadly Capitol Attack


One hundred forty-seven Republicans in Congress voted to try to keep President Donald Trump in power based on what many knew were lies about the election.


Posted on January 9, 2021, 

Tom Williams / CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Imag

House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy was one of the 147 congressional Republicans who voted to try to overturn President-elect Joe Biden's win after rioters stormed the Capitol.

WASHINGTON — Republicans in Congress are demanding “unity” after 147 of them voted to try to overturn the election, propping up the very lies that led a mob of President Donald Trump’s supporters to violently attack the US Capitol on Wednesday.

The calls for unity came not in the immediate aftermath of the storming of the Capitol, or after the group — a majority of House Republicans plus eight of their Senate colleagues — spent seven more hours forcing votes to try to undo President-elect Joe Biden’s win and citing claims of election fraud that have been repeatedly rejected by the courts and for which there is no evidence. The calls came as Democrats began to consider imposing consequences.

Impeaching the President with just 12 days left will only divide our country more. I've reached out to President-elect Biden today &amp; plan to speak to him about how we must work together to lower the temperature &amp; unite the country to solve America’s challenges. My full statement

Twitter: @GOPLeader

"There is more that unites us than divides us, and that’s where we must focus. Let’s set politics aside, focus on the American people and sound policy to fix our nation, and preserve its bounty for future generations." My full statement on this week: https://t.co/IYhUqMjX0T

Twitter: @CongPalazzo

The 147 Republicans voted separately to undermine the will of voters in Arizona and Pennsylvania; the vast majority of them voted for both. Many of them knew that the election fraud claims upon which they based those votes were not true, that they were invented by and for a president whose ego would not allow him to acknowledge his own loss until a full day after a violent mass breached the Capitol on his behalf and as news was breaking that a Capitol Police officer had died.

Sens. Josh Hawley and Ted Cruz, who led the Senate attempts to object to Biden’s win, didn’t say they believed the election was fraudulent in defending those decisions Wednesday night. Instead, they argued a lot of Trump’s supporters believed it was and that they for some reason had some responsibility to act on their behalf while continuing to amplify conspiracies, “leaving the ouroboros undermining our democracy to keep chomping away,” as the Washington Post's Mike DeBonis put it. Hawley spoke solely about his concerns about Pennsylvania’s election, raising questions about the state’s mail-in voting law passed more than a year ago that had already been rejected by multiple courts, and which Hawley himself said were “quite apart from allegations of any fraud.”

Cruz has since said the nation must now “must come together and put this anger and division behind us.” Hawley — who was photographed raising a fist in support of the mob before they broke into the Capitol — has been mostly silent but did complain about the loss of his book contract while comparing Simon & Schuster to the “mob” that stormed the Capitol.

The attack at the Capitol was a despicable act of terrorism and a shocking assault on our democratic system. We must come together and put this anger and division behind us. We must, and I am confident we will, have a peaceful and orderly transition of power. My full statement:

Twitter: @SenTedCruz

In the aftermath of Wednesday’s violence — in which not only was Officer Brian D. Sicknick killed, but one Trump supporter was shot and killed by police, and three others died due to medical emergencies — the 147 Republicans who voted to try to keep Trump in power have largely praised law enforcement and, rightly, mourned Sicknick, something Trump himself has not publicly done. And they’ve decried Democratic plans to start a second impeachment of the president as anti-unity; a handful of the Republicans who voted to uphold Biden’s win are telling him the same thing.

Susan and I were saddened to learn of the passing of U.S. Capitol Police Officer Brian Sicknick, who died protecting our Capitol. Our prayers are with his family and our law enforcement officers. We must heal our nation’s divide; there is more that unites us than divides us.

Twitter: @RepRonEstes

President Trump showed extremely poor leadership on Wednesday, but there is no good Constitutional argument for impeachment. Speaker Pelosi knows the Senate will not try this case before the President leaves office. Impeachment will only worsen divisions, rather than uniting us.

Twitter: @RepTimBurchett

Impeachment is not a path toward a unified solution. My full statement ⬇️

Twitter: @RepBobGood

They’ve also focused heavily on “cancel culture” because the man who will be president of the United States for just another 11 days was booted from Twitter and other social media platforms for inciting violence. This, despite the fact that you cannot cancel the commander in chief, who continues to have the largest platform in the country — the Oval Office, the White House briefing room, the MAGA rally stage, and literally dozens of TV cameras following him — at his disposal whenever he wants to speak.

What happened on Wednesday at the U.S. Capitol is as wrong as wrong can be. But canceling conservative speech will not promote “unity and healing.” It will only divide us further.

Twitter: @Jim_Jordan

To these 147 Republicans, Democrats considering impeaching Trump is what is causing the division. Not their reality-defying support for a president who wouldn’t call in reinforcements as members of Congress, reporters, and staff huddled behind chairs and desks fearing for their lives; who was reportedly pleased by the chaos, as rioters pushed past police officers and shouted “Hang Mike Pence!”; who took hours and endless pleading from staff to tell his people to stop — and even then, telling them, “We love you. You’re very special.” What we need now, after those Republicans took the time to try to give Trump and those domestic terrorists what they wanted, is unity.

MARKOFF CHAINEY  #FNORD
A Disgruntled Employee Changed The State Department’s Website To Say That Trump’s Term Ends Today, Sources Say

Secretary of State Mike Pompeo is launching an investigation after biographical pages for the president and vice president were changed on Monday.


Christopher Miller BuzzFeed News Contributor

Last updated on January 11, 2021


Anadolu Agency / Getty Images

A disgruntled employee at the State Department changed the biographies of President Donald Trump and Vice President Mike Pence to say their term was coming to an end on Monday — nine days before President-elect Joe Biden is to be sworn in — two current-serving diplomats with knowledge of the situation told BuzzFeed News.

The changes to the State Department’s website come days after Trump incited a deadly insurrection at the US Capitol that has led Democrats to begin the process of impeaching him for a second time and led to calls for Pence to invoke the 25th Amendment and remove Trump from office.


The president’s biography was changed to read, “Donald J. Trump's term ended on 2021-01-11 19:49:00,” while the vice president’s biography was edited to “Michael R. Pence's term ended on 2021-01-11 19:44:22.” The time stamp on Trump's page changed multiple times, before both pages were removed around 3:50 p.m. and replaced with a 404 reading, "We’re sorry, this site is currently experiencing technical difficulties. Please try again in a few moments."

One of the diplomats said that Secretary of State Mike Pompeo has ordered an internal investigation into the matter, beginning with interns and employees leaving the State Department this week and next ahead of the transition to the Biden administration.

A screenshot of Trump's biography on the State Department's website Monday afternoon.

Screenshot/State Department / Via state.gov



A screenshot of Pence's biography on the State Department's website Monday afternoon.

Screenshot/State Department / Via state.gov


Both diplomats said that an investigation into the matter could be a challenge, considering how many people have administrative access to the content management system used for the State Department’s official website.


It’s a “closed system” that is “nearly impossible to hack,” said one of the diplomats.

"It's 100% not a hack," they said.

In recent days, dozens of career US diplomats signed two unprecedented dissent cables condemning Trump for inciting the deadly insurrection on the Capitol last week, Foreign Policy magazine and other outlets reported.

Those outlets said that the second, strongest-worded cable rebuked Pompeo for his “failure to issue a statement unequivocally acknowledging that President-Elect Biden won the 2020 election” and protested the “President’s incitement of insurrectionist violence against the United States.”

More than 100 State Department employees signed the cable, including three who told BuzzFeed News they would have preferred even stronger language in them.

Their frustration, they said, stemmed partly from Pompeo’s weak statement, published in a series of tweets on Wednesday, that called the storming of the Capitol “unacceptable,” but did not include any mention of Trump.

Reached for comment on the site changes Monday, the White House referred BuzzFeed News to the State Department, which did not immediately provide one.




 Christopher Miller is a Kyiv-based American journalist and editor.

GoFundMe Has Banned Trump Rally Travel Fundraisers Because Of The Capitol Violence

Trump supporters are planning and preparing for more inauguration-related rallies, but they will no longer be able to use GoFundMe to help them get there.


Brianna Sacks BuzzFeed News Reporter

Posted on January 11, 2021

 Pacific Press/LightRocket 
Police direct tear gas at pro-Trump rioters at the Capitol building.

As Trump supporters continue to plan rallies in Washington, DC, before and during Joe Biden's inauguration, GoFundMe, the largest fundraising platform in the world, has banned their ability to raise money for travel expenses.

GoFundMe, used by 96 million people, announced the decision to ban those fundraisers on Monday. Like other tech giants, the crowdfunding company, which has processed more than 120 million donations since it launched in 2010, has been scrambling to find, monitor, and remove incendiary pro-Trump content.

"Due to the violence, GoFundMe has removed numerous fundraisers intended to raise money for travel expenses,” a spokesperson told BuzzFeed News. “GoFundMe will remove fundraisers for travel expenses to a future political event where there's risk of violence by the attendees."

GoFundMe campaigns have helped to raise money for and spread the world about pro-Trump events. BuzzFeed News previously identified more than a dozen campaigns, which the site has since removed, that raised money for people to travel to DC for the rally on Jan. 6 that morphed into a violent, deadly attempted coup. In November, the site also took down a fundraising page for spreading election misinformation.

Since November, GoFundMe told BuzzFeed News, it has found and deleted about 1,400 election-related fundraising campaigns that violated their terms of service. Many of these campaigns were related to “Stop the Steal” rallies, spreading conspiracy theories about election fraud, promoting violence, or trying to raise money for legal fees for people who stormed the Capitol.

As a result of its new policy, the platform has removed 40 campaigns that were created solely to help fund people’s travel to DC for upcoming rallies.

Trump supporters, from couples in Arizona to popular right-wing personalities like Candace Owens, had been using GoFundMe to ratchet up financial support for years. The site suspended the commentator in June for her repeated “pattern of inflammatory statements that spread hate, discrimination, intolerance and falsehoods.”

Before the violence in DC last week, millions of people could create fundraising campaigns to help them travel to political events.

In one campaign, titled #PatriotPilgrimageDC, 285 donors raised $21,548 “to financially support Patriots on their voyage to the capital on 1/6/21 for the DC Protest!”


GoFundMe / Via web.archive.org

On Dec. 6, a person on GoFundMe asked for help financing “Patriots in AZ” “to help pay for a rental car, gas, lodging & other expenses to go to Washington DC for the MAGA Million March" on December 12.

The next day, a couple created a fundraiser called “SendTeam RedPillFairy to DC!” and asked for $1,000 to “cover our round trip flights from California to DC, as well as a hotel room stay near the event.” The creators described themselves as independent members of the media who run sites and channels that churn out conspiracy theories and feature extremists such as the Proud Boys. Before GoFundMe pulled the campaign, it had received $1,330.

GoFundMe’s decision comes as federal officials prepare for a cascade of pro-Trump events across the country. The Associated Press reported Monday that the FBI is warning of plans for armed protests at every state capital and in DC before Biden’s inauguration on Jan 20.

Last week, tech giants Facebook and Twitter finally took action, yanking Trump’s accounts, while other companies like PayPal and Shopify shut down accounts related to the Trump campaign, Trump Organization, and funding the president’s supporters.


GoFundMe

But experts say the actions, while significant, are too late, given that these groups have been coordinating and growing in the open for years. Claire Wardle, an expert on misinformation and social media, said the reckoning is long overdue. But after the extraordinary events last week, there was no choice.

"For those of us who have been tracking platform responses, there have definitely been moments when we expected to see more action, and didn't," she said. "But ultimately platforms, internet infrastructure companies and other sites like GoFundMe or Shopify never wanted to be dragged into these kinds of decisions, because they're hard. But they now have little choice now because the pressure is so great."

The Stop the Steal movement, which came together online before it erupted, has become a pro-Trump machine with a presence on nearly every social media platform and in every state. Women for America First, which gave rise to the Stop the Steal rallies, requested the permit for the march that ultimately became the attempted coup at the Capitol. And the consequences have been grave. Five people died, including a police officer. On Saturday, a Capitol Police officer who was present during the siege died by suicide, and NBC News reported that other officers have detailed the horrifying toll it has taken on their mental health.

Although major tech corporations are bolstering up their efforts to thwart extremist and dangerous content before it leads to more violence, Trump supporters are still finding ways to organize and fundraise for their cause. After getting booted off GoFundMe, the Proud Boys have turned to GiveSendGo, a popular Christian crowdfunding site.

Enrique Tarrio, the leader of the Proud Boys, a white supremacist group, created a GiveSendGo campaign to help cover his legal fees after he was arrested for targeting a historic Black church and carrying high-capacity firearm magazines during last week’s pro-Trump rallies and banned from the district.

So far, he’s raised more than $113,000 of his $2,000 goal from nearly 2,360 donors. One anonymous donor who gave $10 wrote: “The boys are back in town!”


A Judge's Son Was Arrested For The Capitol Coup Attempt

Aaron Mostofsky, 34, was arrested after identifying himself in an on-camera interview during the raid of the Capitol.

Julia Reinstein BuzzFeed News Reporter
Last updated on January 12, 2021


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Saul Loeb / Getty Images
Aaron Mostofsky is seen wearing furs and holding a stick and riot police gear during the assault on the Capitol.


The son of a Brooklyn judge has been arrested for taking part in last week's deadly coup attempt at the Capitol, prosecutors said Tuesday.

Aaron Mostofsky, 34, was arraigned in a virtual Brooklyn federal court appearance Tuesday afternoon, where he was hit with multiple charges, including theft of government property, a felony. He faces up to 10 years in prison if convicted.

Following the riot on Wednesday, law enforcement allowed Mostofsky to simply walk out of the Capitol and return home to New York. The FBI took him into custody from his home in Brooklyn's Midwood neighborhood on Tuesday.

He was released Tuesday on $100,000 bail. According to the conditions of his bail agreement, Mostofsky is forbidden from leaving New York City without approval, visiting state capitols, attending political gatherings, and speaking with co-defendants or co-conspirators. He will also be required to wear a GPS ankle monitor.

His lawyer, Jeffrey Schwartz, said the 34-year-old man "got caught up in" the chaotic moment.

"I believe the evidence will show he was not part of the mob, that he was not rampaging," Schwartz said. "He got caught up in it, but he understands...how the whole thing in Washington got totally out of hand."


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BREAKING: Aaron Mostofsky, the son of a NY Supreme Court judge was arrested in Midwood Brooklyn on Tuesday morning for his alleged involvement in the Capitol riot.02:59 PM - 12 Jan 2021
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The man's father is Steven "Shlomo" Mostofsky, Gothamist reported, a Kings County Supreme Court judge and prominent figure in Brooklyn's modern Orthodox Jewish community. (Requests for comment to the judge were not immediately returned.)

Aaron Mostofsky did not take great pains to hide his identity during the violent riot in the halls of Congress, according to a criminal complaint provided to BuzzFeed News.

He was arrested thanks to an on-camera interview he gave to the New York Post from inside the Capitol, where he identified himself as Aaron from Brooklyn, and was seen wearing a bulletproof vest and riot shield with US Capitol Police insignia, which he claimed to have found on the floor.

Wearing the vest prominently labeled "POLICE" and a bizarre fur pelt, he told the Post he stormed the Capitol because he believed President Donald Trump's lies that the election was rigged against him.

“We were cheated. I don’t think 75 million people voted for Trump — I think it was close to 85 million," Mostofsky said in the interview. "I think certain states that have been red for a long time turned blue and were stolen, like New York.”

He also appeared in several of the most widely circulated photos from the insurrection, including this one, where he can be seen behind "QAnon Shaman" Jake Angeli's horned hat.


Saul Loeb / Getty Images

Mostofsky went even further to flaunt his crimes, posting videos of the attempted coup on his Instagram account, "@aaron_mostofsky_official." (The account appears to have since been deleted or banned.)

During his release, Mostofsky will stay with his brother Neil "Nachman" Mostofsky. Neil is the vice president of the South Brooklyn Conservative Club and an elected district leader, who previously claimed to have connections "very high up in [the Trump] administration."

Days before his brother's federal court hearing, Neil defended Aaron in an interview with Gothamist, spewing absurd explanations for his actions.

"My brother did nothing illegal," Neil said. "He definitely was not part of the riot."

As explanation for why Aaron was, in fact, inside the Capitol during the riot, Neil said he was "pushed inside."

Saul Loeb / Getty Images

Neil was also in DC the day of the attempted coup and said he had attended Trump's rally but left prior to the storming of the Capitol.

"You’re full of shit. You’re a dishonest person. My brother went as a citizen of America," Neil told Gothamist. "You find me one [Black Lives Matter] riot or one antifa riot from over the summer that didn’t have way more damage."

In a statement Tuesday, William F. Sweeney, Jr., the assistant director in charge of the FBI's New York office, confirmed the FBI had arrested Mostofsky and thanked the public for sending in tips that have helped to identify people who took part in the Capitol attack.

"For those in this area considering participating in future activity similar to Mr. Mostofsky's alleged behavior, let me be clear," Sweeney said. "The FBI will find you, arrest you, and do our part to ensure you face the full force of the federal criminal justice system.