Exclusive: Before Jan. 6, FBI collected information from at least 4
Proud Boys
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[April 27, 2021]
By Aram Roston
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Among the far-right
groups whose members are suspected of planning the Jan. 6 attack on the
U.S. Capitol are the Proud Boys. In March, the Federal Bureau of
Investigation’s director told the Senate Judiciary Committee that he
“absolutely” wished the agency had penetrated the group beforehand, or
knew its plans.
“I do not consider what happened on January 6th to be an acceptable
result,” Director Christopher Wray said. “We are focused very, very hard
on how can we get better sources, better information, better analysis.”
The FBI had deeper insight into the group than Wray disclosed, however.
Bureau agents maintained connections with key Proud Boys leaders
starting as early as 2019, a Reuters examination has found. At least
four Proud Boys have provided information to the FBI, Reuters learned.
Often these leaders were sharing intelligence about Antifa, a loose
movement of left-wing activists opposed by former President Donald Trump
and right-wing media.
The connections between the Proud Boys and the FBI do not mean the
agency had thoroughly penetrated the far-right group. But some law
enforcement veterans say the ties show the agency could have done more
to prepare for the deadly Jan. 6 uprising, which sought to overturn the
election of Democrat Joe Biden as president.
“This was a group committing violence in public and promoting themselves
as a violent group,” said Mike German, a former FBI agent who
investigated domestic terrorism. German previously has criticized the
bureau over what he says was a failure to focus on the Proud Boys ahead
of Jan. 6. Told of the findings of this story, German said: “It’s hard
to understand how the FBI could have had a relationship with four
individuals in the Proud Boys and didn’t understand the nature of the
threat to the Capitol.”
The FBI declined to answer written questions for this story or to
comment on the four Proud Boy connections detailed here. An FBI official
said Wray’s Senate testimony reinforced “the need to detect and deter
acts of violence.”
Reuters interviewed two Proud Boys members who spoke on the condition of
anonymity about some members’ interactions with the FBI. Reuters also
interviewed Proud Boys leader Enrique Tarrio, examined court records and
interviewed sources close to the federal investigation.
The reporting showed:
- One Proud Boy left the group in December after telling other members
he was cooperating with the FBI by providing information about Antifa,
say Tarrio and two other Proud Boy sources. The former member, whom
Reuters was unable to identify, insisted to group leaders that he had
not revealed information about the Proud Boys, these people say.
- A second Proud Boy leader bragged in 2019 about sharing information
with the FBI about Antifa, according to private chats leaked on social
media. The chats’ authenticity was confirmed by a source familiar with
the Proud Boys and the Jan. 6 case.
- A third Proud Boy leader, Joseph Biggs, who was indicted and charged
with conspiracy in the January attack, has said in court papers he
reported information to the FBI about Antifa for months. Reuters spoke
to Biggs two days before the riot. In that interview, he said he had
specific plans for Jan. 6, but declined to disclose them. But, he
volunteered to Reuters in that call, he was willing to tell his FBI
contact of his plans for the coming rally, if asked. Reuters wasn’t able
to determine whether such a contact took place.
- The fourth Proud Boy, Tarrio, previously had worked as a cooperating
witness, sometimes undercover, for the FBI and local authorities in
South Florida two years before the far-right group was formed, as
Reuters reported in January. Tarrio told Reuters he continued
intermittently to talk to the FBI, though he insists he never spoke
about the inner workings of the Proud Boys. Instead, he said, he
provided information about Antifa and about marching plans. Tarrio also
spoke to the FBI in October, he said, when the Proud Boys were briefly
accused of threatening Democratic voters via email. The Department of
Homeland Security later alleged that Iran had “spoofed” Proud Boys email
addresses, in a strange effort to disrupt the election. Iran denied it.
Tarrio, who was arrested two days before Jan. 6 on vandalism and
firearms charges, did not take part in the Capitol insurrection. He says
the group had no plans for violence that day. “We were actually looking
forward to just having a fucking relaxing day, watching the president
speak,” he said, referring to Trump.
Still, at least 18 Proud Boys members have been arrested since the
Capitol riots, on charges ranging from conspiracy to assaulting police
officers. At least six others associated with or accompanying the group
have also been charged. Overall, over 400 hundred people have been
arrested in the broader federal case.
When Jan. 6 arrived, federal and local agencies were unprepared for the
assault, in which rioters attempted to block U.S. lawmakers’ formal
certification of Biden’s election and keep Trump in office. The Capitol
Police were unable to hold back the onslaught, law enforcement
barricades were easily overrun, and five people died.
‘MINISTRY OF SELF DEFENSE’
The Proud Boys have earned a reputation as right-wing protestors and
street fighters who have clashed with leftists at rallies in Portland,
New York, Washington and elsewhere. Founded in 2016, the avowedly male
chauvinist organization challenges what it perceives as excessive
political correctness. Its members have often embraced their reputation
for violence.
Proud Boys members, including Tarrio, have said they have told the FBI
of protest routes, for instance, when planning rallies. They say they do
not view such disclosures as informing or cooperating, but rather as a
public safety protocol.
On Dec. 12, 2020, a month before the insurrection, Proud Boys, many clad
in tactical vests and body armor over their signature yellow and black
shirts, were greeted with rousing applause by Trump supporters in a
rally in Washington to protest the Republican’s loss to Biden.
Violence spiraled out of control. Clutches of Proud Boys prowled the
streets, attacking people they claimed were aligned with Antifa. Four
people were stabbed. Two of those reportedly injured were Proud Boys, by
someone they clashed with on the street. Tarrio would later be accused
by authorities of burning a “Black Lives Matter” banner; video showed
Proud Boys squirting it with lighter fluid to make the flames grow
bright in the dark.
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Members of the far-right group Proud Boys and supporters of U.S.
President Donald Trump gather in front of the U.S. Capitol Building
to protest against the certification of the 2020 U.S. presidential
election results by the U.S. Congress, in Washington, U.S., January
6, 2021. REUTERS/Jim Urquhart/File Photo
From that chaos grew the seeds of the Proud Boys
planning for Jan. 6.
After the violence of Dec. 12, the presidents of the 155 Proud Boy
chapters held a vote to ban the organization from officially
sponsoring such rallies. “We voted against any more rallies until
further notice,” one Proud Boy leader said. The vote meant that
Proud Boys could not wear their “colors” – yellow and black
paraphernalia adorned with various insignia, including roosters and
laurel wreaths.
The point was to rein in the bad publicity stemming from the rampant
violence, and to prevent Proud Boys from getting injured.
The vote has not been previously reported. It was an important
decision, members said, because it’s the reason the Proud Boys went
to Washington as they did on Jan. 6: without wearing their Proud Boy
gear. No colors meant the Proud Boys would not be easily
identifiable by the public and law enforcement; so long as they
weren’t in official garb, they could still turn out for Trump
despite the ban.
To prepare for Jan. 6, Tarrio and other leaders set up a virtual
“rally chapter” they called the Ministry of Self Defense, or MOSD,
on a chat on the Telegram messaging platform, two Proud Boy sources
say. That channel, say the sources, would become a planning tool for
Jan. 6.
By the end of December, prosecutors now say, Tarrio and Biggs were
publicly announcing their instructions to Proud Boys to go to
Washington, DC, “incognito,” as they called it. Tarrio promised they
would turn out “in record numbers.”
Before the presidential certification, in late December, a Proud Boy
with the handle “Danny Mac” came forward to the group with a
confession.
“He said he was an informant,” one Proud Boy said. “He said he was
giving them information for two years.”
Danny Mac disclosed to the Proud Boys leadership the FBI had paid
him for information about Antifa, two members told Reuters. But
soon, he told the leaders, the FBI was demanding information about
the Proud Boys group itself. Danny Mac said he was coming clean to
the Proud Boys, and promised that he had not disclosed any secrets.
Nevertheless, according to a Dec. 19 message on Proud Boys chat
rooms that was read by a member to Reuters, Danny Mac was
“excommunicated” from the group. His access was deleted from any
chats.
In an interview, Tarrio was cautious in discussing the former
member. “He communicated with me that he was in touch with law
enforcement,” Tarrio said, without elaborating. Tarrio said the
member was rooted out over his “leadership style,” not his
cooperation, but offered no further detail.
Reuters was unable to contact the former member known as Danny Mac.
The group deleted the Ministry of Self Defense chats after Tarrio
was arrested Jan. 4 for his actions in the December rally. Tarrio
faced a misdemeanor warrant for burning the Black Lives Matter flag
and a felony charge for bringing two high capacity rifle magazines
with him. He has not entered a plea and was released from custody
after one night in jail. He is scheduled to appear in court in June.
After his arrest, a new private chat group was set up, prosecutors
say. It was called “New MOSD.”
Proud Boys say that the FBI’s interest in tapping into the far-right
group appeared to stem from members’ conflicts with and knowledge of
Antifa – the loose collective of leftist activists who fight against
forces they deem to be fascist. “Fuck Antifa!” Proud Boy members
chant at rallies. Some wear “Death to Antifa” t-shirts.
In January 2019, a member of the Philadelphia chapter of the Proud
Boys who called himself “Aaron PB” was on a Telegram chat with
fellow members to gather information about Antifa, according to
leaked chat screenshots whose authenticity was confirmed by a source
familiar with the Proud Boys. Aaron PB said in a chat that he was
gathering “info we want to send our FBI contact.”
PROUD BOY CHARGED
Proud Boy member Biggs, an Army veteran with combat experience in
Iraq and Afghanistan, has pleaded not guilty to federal charges of
conspiring to disrupt the certification of the presidential
election. A judge has ordered him jailed until trial.
Biggs was one of the most visible leaders among the Capitol rioters
on Jan. 6. That day he was wearing black tactical gloves with
reinforced knuckle protection, and a distinctive black, gray and
white flannel shirt with a two way radio clipped to the upper right
pocket. He strode at the head of the Proud Boys column that marched
around the Capitol Building.
In a court filing last month, Biggs’ lawyer argued that his client
should not be jailed before trial. The lawyer wrote that the Proud
Boy leader has, for years, cooperated with the FBI and developed
ties with at least one agent. That cooperation started, the lawyer
wrote, when Biggs would call or meet with the FBI and local
authorities to explain Proud Boys march routes and plans.
Biggs’ lawyer, John Daniel Hull IV, declined to comment to Reuters.
By July 2020, the lawyer wrote, Biggs’ relationship with the FBI
ratcheted up when the Proud Boy leader met with two special agents
for two hours. Biggs “spoke often” on the phone with a Daytona Beach
agent, the lawyer wrote. The filing said FBI agents wanted Biggs to
tell them what he knew about Antifa.
Two days before the Capitol insurrection, Reuters reached Biggs on
the phone. He wouldn’t say what the group had planned for the
scheduled Jan. 6 protest.
“If I tell you right now, it will give away my play,” he said in the
Jan. 4 interview. But, he said, he was willing to tell his plans to
a special agent in the FBI whom he knew, if he were asked. “If the
guy that I know called me and had any questions, I would respond.”
(Reporting by Aram Roston in Washington. Editing by Ronnie Greene)
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