NC J6er pardoned by Trump is just latest rioter to face sexual assault charges
January 07, 2026
Two months after David Paul Daniel helped lead the mob into the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, the North Carolina man met police investigators in the Charlotte suburb of Mint Hill, to answer questions about allegations he sexually assaulted a girl and took photographs of her naked, over a span of four years.
Daniel denied inappropriate conduct but police seized his cellphone as evidence. Armed with a search warrant signed by a North Carolina judge, police turned the phone over to the federal Homeland Security Investigations office in Charlotte, for review.
But it was only after FBI agents and Mint Hill police officers arrested Daniels at his home on Jan. 6 charges, in November 2023, that Homeland Security Investigations (HSI) opened the phone and reviewed its contents.
In the meantime, a second minor victim accused Daniel of statutory rape, 80 miles north in the Winston-Salem area, prompting the Forsyth County Sheriff’s Office to open its own investigation. Now, Daniel faces federal charges related to the production, possession and receipt of child pornography and sexual exploitation of a minor.
HSI's role in delaying that state investigation is being reported for the first time by Raw Story.
Daniel is one of around a half-dozen individuals involved in the Jan. 6 attack and pardoned by President Donald Trump who have faced sex charges, including child exploitation and rape.
Other J6-ers have completed prison time for child sex offenses.
Daniel is unique in arguing that he was only charged for sex crimes as a result of the FBI’s massive Jan. 6 investigation.
Prosecutors disagree. Daniel has pleaded not guilty, but a U.S. magistrate judge ordered him detained last September, writing that “the government’s forecast of evidence is compelling and suggests defendant engaged in sexual acts with two young girls in his own family.”
The magistrate noted that Daniel’s ex-wife “appeared in court to request that defendant not be released.”
In other cases, the Trump Department of Justice has dismissed separate charges that arose as a result of the Jan. 6 investigation. They include:
In Daniel's case, his court-appointed lawyer argued in a federal filing in October that the “one significant difference” between those cases and his client’s case is that Daniel’s “involves the politically unsavory charge of child exploitation.”
“Politically, and quite reasonably, the pardon cannot be regarded as encompassing child exploitation,” the filing states.
As Daniel seeks an evidentiary hearing on a motion to dismiss, the DOJ continues to release a millions of documents from the case against the late financier and convicted child trafficker Jeffrey Epstein, in response to an act of Congress.
President Trump has struggled to overcome persistent public scrutiny of his friendship with Epstein, although there is no evidence the president was involved in Epstein’s crimes.
In a footnote to Daniel’s Oct. 27 filing, his lawyer states that his client “is informed and believes” that the decision by the government to go forward with prosecution “is institutional, occurring at an elevated level within the Department of Justice.”
The DOJ did not respond to a request for comment.
A spokesperson for the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Western District of North Carolina told Raw Story the office does “not discuss charging decisions,” adding that such decisions “are made by the U.S. Attorney, often in consultation with others at the Department of Justice.”
Russ Ferguson, a former white collar criminal defense and business litigation attorney, has led the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Western District of North Carolina since his appointment last March. He took the oath of office on Christmas Eve, following Senate confirmation.
Daniel’s lawyer argues in the Oct. 27 filing that “there never would have been a federal prosecution of Mr. Daniel for child exploitation charges unless the pardoned January 6 investigation had prompted the government to obtain the J6 search warrant and search Mr. Daniel’s home.”
During the search, FBI agents seized devices, and after obtaining a warrant to search the devices, uncovered images used as evidence to support the child exploitation charges.
Daniel’s filing goes on to say that “the government was not aware of the abandoned state investigation until it began to pursue the January 6 search warrant.”
But an affidavit in support of the arrest warrant by Chase Bannister, a special agent with the FBI Charlotte Field Office, undercuts the claim that Mint Hill police abandoned their investigation.
Instead, the Mint Hill investigation appears to have languished as a seized iPhone sat at the Homeland Security Investigations office in Charlotte from March 2021 through December 2023 without anyone reviewing its contents.
“During operational coordination leading up to the arrest and search of Daniel, and his residence, investigators were made aware that MHPD had an open investigation regarding the allegation of sexual assault of a minor by Daniel,” the FBI affidavit said.
The victim told Mint Hill police investigators that from 2015 to 2019, Daniel “sexually assaulted her on multiple occasions,” took pictures of her naked, and “had her perform oral sex on him,” according to the affidavit.
Calls to the Mint Hill Police Department for this story went unreturned.
While the Mint Hill police investigators waited for Homeland Security Investigations to review the phone, the mother of a second girl reported to the Forsyth County Sheriff’s Office that Daniel “had been involved sexually” with the girl in summer 2022.
When interviewed in May 2023, the second girl told investigators “Daniel had committed sexual acts with her on multiple occasions,” according to the affidavit.
“HSI was not able to access the cellphone until Dec. 13, 2023,” the affidavit states.
That shows that officials didn’t look at the phone until almost two weeks after FBI agents executed an arrest warrant at Daniel’s home, and detained him on Jan. 6 charges.
HSI Charlotte could not be reached for comment. Emails to the U.S. Department of Homeland Security went unreturned.
Krista Karcher, the public relations manager for the Forsyth County Sheriff's Office, declined to make Sheriff Bobby Kimbrough available for comment for this story.
The FBI affidavit does not disclose whether the review of the phone seized in 2021 yielded evidence of child sexual abuse material.
But a review of the phone seized from Daniel’s home at the time of his November 2023 arrest on Jan. 6 charges includes photos of the second alleged victim that reveal her graphically posed with the lower portion of her body exposed, according to the FBI.