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‘Just kill me now’: Jan. 6 rioter who led initial breach at Capitol ordered back in jail

A federal judge has revoked bond for a man who helped lead the initial breach of the US Capitol grounds on Jan. 6, 2021, after he reportedly threatened to kill himself and fled police, who later found an AR-15 assault rifle in his car, in Garner, NC earlier this month.

Judge Timothy J. Kelly issued a warrant for James Tate Grant’s arrest on Tuesday and directed the defendant to make contact with pre-trial services in the Eastern District of North Carolina to arrange his surrender.

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MAGA rioter asks judge to let him use dating app while awaiting trial for assaulting Michael Fanone

A man accused in the January 6 insurrection has asked a federal judge to allow him to use a dating app while on home arrest at his parents’ residence in Buffalo, New York.

Thomas Sibick made the request of U.S. District Judge Amy B. Jackson on Christmas Day, reported the CBS affiliate WUSA9 in Washington D.C.

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'I will shed more' blood: Judge orders oath-breaking former deputy to remain in jail to await MAGA riot trial

A federal judge has ruled that a former sheriff’s deputy from Tennessee who is accused of dragging a Metropolitan police officer into a crowd of violent rioters at the US Capitol on Jan. 6 must stay in jail while he awaits trial.

Ronald Colton McAbee was employed by the Williamson County Sheriff’s Office in Tennessee at the time he and a friend joined the mob at the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, according to the government. In his order requiring McAbee to remain in pretrial detention, issued on Dec. 21, 2021, Judge Emmet G. Sullivan cited evidence submitted by the government that McAbee was “excused from work” at the sheriff’s office due to a shoulder injury sustained during a recent car accident. According to a text submitted into evidence by the government, the 27-year-old sheriff’s deputy went to the doctor for CT scans and MRIs only two days before the Jan. 6 assault on the Capitol.

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Judge ends Capitol rioter's hopes of getting out of jail early after watching violence-inciting video

Ryan Nichols, a Marine Corps veteran facing felony charges in connection with the Jan. 6 assault on the Capitol, has spent 11 months in pre-trial lockup at the DC Central Detention Facility.

By filing a motion for modification of bail to allow conditional release pending trial, Nichols forced the government to lay out evidence of his dangerousness to the American public, which reveals extensive advance coordination with other rioters and Nichols’ leadership role.

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Ex-Marine aims to flip Missouri's red-state Senate seat with fiery populism -- and 'tough love' for  Dems

Lucas Kunce is a Democrat running for an open U.S. Senate seat in 2022 in Missouri. He is by far the leading campaign fundraiser in his party, having amassed more than double the amount of his nearest opponent.

But when it comes to looking or sounding like a traditional Democratic candidate, that’s about the end of it. Kunce is the quintessential outsider, leaning heavily on raw populist messaging that in the Trump era has been hijacked in Missouri and elsewhere -- however disingenuously -- by Republicans.

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'Don’t worry about money': New charges show extensive coordination between extremist groups before Jan. 6

The arrests of two members of the Patriot Boys militia in northern Texas earlier this week raises new questions about outside funding to pay for tactical gear and travel to Washington, DC on Jan. 6, 2021, and broader coordination among the various groups that led the assault on the US Capitol.

According to the charging document for the two men, Lucas Denney, a US Army veteran and president of the Patriot Boys, recruited Donald Hazard to go to DC on Jan. 6 in a text on Christmas Day in 2020, simultaneously appointing him to serve as “sergeant at arms” for the militia.

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A sociologist explains the biggest mistakes the media is making about our political moment

You already know the House Select Committee released text messages sent to Mark Meadows while the January 6 insurrection was underway. Some of them came from three hosts at Fox, imploring the former White House chief of staff to get the former president to stop the violence. What you did not know was that some came from Jake Sherman. The founder of Punchbowl News said so last night.

“I knew I had communicated a ton with White House officials that day as I sat in the Capitol,” Sherman wrote on Twitter. “This thread stuck out to me. That’s because they were my texts to meadows.” He posted a screenshot of text messages read by ranking Republican Liz Cheney. The full House voted last night to hold Meadows in criminal contempt.

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Biden is under fire from a familiar GOP tactic — here's what Democrats need to do to fight back

It started just over two weeks ago with a Wall Street Journal opinion headline: “Biden’s covid Death Milestone: More Americans have died of the virus in 2021 than in all of 2020.” That unleashed the pig pile.

Republican politicians and their right-wing media sock puppets fell over themselves claiming Biden and Trump were somehow the same on covid. Or perhaps – gasp – Trump was better. It’s hogwash.

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'Like Nazi Germany': DC insider says Patriot Front's vandalism might put far-right group in more legal trouble

Richard Painter, who formerly served as the chief ethics lawyer for President George W. Bush, tells Raw Story that the leadership of the white supremacist group Patriot Front could potentially face legal consequences after its leader instructed members to consult him about vandalism.

The insular white supremacist group has painted over at least a dozen murals honoring George Floyd and other Black people killed by the police in the past year, and has also reportedly vandalized a Hmong cultural center in St. Paul, Minn. in recent months. In early 2019, the group’s posters were placed at a synagogue and at an LGBTQ center in Burlington, Vt.

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BUSTED: 'Overtly fascist' Patriot Front leader caught on tape telling members to 'consult' him about vandalism

Following its highly publicized Dec. 4 march on the Lincoln Memorial, the white supremacist group Patriot Front held a national call with about 135 members on the conferencing platform Mumble.

The insular white supremacist group is known for its furtive nighttime stickering, postering and spray-painting campaigns and highly choreographed flash mob-style rallies, both of which are repackaged as heavily stylized social media propaganda campaigns with fascist aesthetics designed to appeal to alienated, young white men. Footage of banner drops is interspersed with members engaged in fight scenes, hiking and scaling mountains, meant to convey that they’re conquering their destiny.

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Two Patriot Boys arrested on Jan. 6 charges -- including #PoleTosser who 'swung' at Michael Fanone

The FBI has arrested Lucas Denney, a Texas man who taunted the agency with vitriolic social media posts and posed with high-profile Republican leaders like Sen. Ted Cruz after online sleuths nicknamed him #PoleTosser for hurling a wooden pole at law enforcement officers during the violent confrontation on the west plaza of the US Capitol on Jan. 6.

The 44-year-old Denney of Mansfield, a suburb south of Fort Worth, is the president of a Three Percenter-oriented group called Patriot Boys that has been active in anti-vax rallies and vigilante patrols along the US-Mexico border this year. The FBI also arrested Donald Hazard, 43, of Hurst, Texas. Both men are charged with assaulting, resisting and impeding certain officers with a dangerous weapon or resulting in bodily injury.

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Cop-punching MAGA rioter arrested after being spotted wearing exact same outfit he wore to insurrection

A Colorado man captured on video punching Capitol police officers during the January 6 insurrection has been arrested by the FBI some 11 months later.

Avery Carter MacCracken, 68, of Telluride, Colorado was identified from FBI posters and online photos by a resident of that town. The individual contacted local San Miguel County Sheriff Bill Masters, who turned the information over to the FBI.

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Why they fight: It's not just about Trump -- the insurrectionists believe 'their version of America is under threat'

The Jan. 6 rioters’ composite profile reveals an insurrectionary base willing to resort to political violence to resist challenges to the dominant position of white Christendom and patriarchy in the United States.

At about 8 a.m. on a Thursday morning in late June, FBI agents in tactical vests appeared at the front door of Casey Cusick, a 36-year-old Christian evangelical pastor, in Palm Bay, Fla.

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