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Monthly Archives: February 2021
Two members of the Proud Boys face conspiracy charges in US Capitol riot – CNN
Posted: February 2, 2021 at 7:34 pm
The new indictment against Dominic Pezzola and William Pepe, both of New York, is the first riot-related case to accuse Proud Boys members of working together to attack the Capitol.
But the men are not accused of planning the attack before coming to Washington. They have been charged with conspiring to interfere with police officers defending the Capitol, participating in civil disorder, unlawfully entering restricted grounds and other federal crimes.
Both men were first hit with charges two weeks ago. Prosecutors alleged they had removed metal barricades at the Capitol and that Pezzola had smashed a window using a police officer's riot shield. Footage of the attack shows pro-Trump rioters entering the Capitol through the broken window.
Of the approximately 175 known defendants facing riot-related charges, at least eight are affiliated with the Proud Boys, according to a CNN analysis of court documents. Several of the prosecutors and FBI agents handling these Proud Boys cases are specialists in investigating terrorist groups, violent gangs and other national security matters, according to court filings.
The Justice Department's counterterrorism section, which is part of the national security division, is helping to lead the case against Pezzola and Pepe, according to a news release issued Friday.
In response to the indictment, Pezzola's lawyer Michael Scibetta told CNN that he was "denied contact" with his jailed client, which undercut his ability to mount a "meaningful legal defense."
A lawyer representing Pepe did not immediately respond to emails seeking comment.
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Two members of the Proud Boys face conspiracy charges in US Capitol riot - CNN
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‘Proud Boy’ with local ties charged in storming of US Capitol – The Cross Timbers Gazette
Posted: at 7:34 pm
Date: Tuesday, February 2, 2021
A man with local ties and self-proclaimed member of the Proud Boys was arrested Friday in Corinth on charges related to the Jan. 6 storming of the U.S. Capitol Building.
Daniel Goodwyn, 32, was one of many in an insurrectionist mob made up of ardent supporters of Donald Trump that stormed the Capitol that day, according to a criminal complaint filed against Goodwyn by the Federal Bureau of Investigation. As the U.S. Congress convened to certify the presidential election results, the large crowd forced entry into the building, forcing the Congress members to be evacuated. Several people, including a U.S. Capitol police officer, died during the riot, according to the Associated Press.
Goodwyn was seen and identified in a video that was live-streamed online in which Goodwyn called a police officer an oathbreaker after the officer directed him out of the building. An associate of Goodwyns identified him in the video and also showed the FBI some social media messages and posts by Goodwyn from the Capitol siege. In one post, a message from his account said I didnt break or take anything but I went inside for a couple minutes.
According to the complaint, Goodwyn is a self-proclaimed member of the Proud Boys, a far-right mens organization that received national attention in the first presidential debate when Trump was asked to denounce them and he told them to stand back and stand by.
According to Goodwyns website and LinkedIn pages, he attended Marcus High School in Flower Mound before moving to San Francisco. He was with family in Corinth last week when he was taken into custody and charged with knowingly entering or remaining in any restricted building or grounds without lawful authority, and violent entry and disorderly conduct on Capitol grounds.
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'Proud Boy' with local ties charged in storming of US Capitol - The Cross Timbers Gazette
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Our President Wants Us Here: The Mob That Stormed the Capitol – The New York Times
Posted: at 7:34 pm
It was the table setter for what would come, with nearly 2,000 people gathering in Washington on Tuesday evening for a Rally to Save America. Speaker after angry speaker stoked stolen-election conspiracy theories and name-checked sworn enemies: Democrats and weak Republicans, Communists and Satanists.
Still, the crowd seemed a bit giddy at the prospect of helping President Trump reverse the result of the election though at times the language evoked a call to arms. It is time for war, one speaker declared.
As the audience thinned, groups of young men emerged in Kevlar vests and helmets, a number of them holding clubs and knives. Some were aligned with the neofascist Proud Boys; others with the Three Percenters, a far-right militia group.
Were not backing down anymore, said a man with fresh stitches on his head. This is our country.
That night reflected a disconcerting mix of free speech and certain menace; of everyday Americans supporting their president and extremists prepared to commit violence for him. All had assembled in answer to Mr. Trumps repeated appeals to attend a march to the Capitol the next day that he promised would be wild.
It was. By Wednesday afternoon, a narrow group of Trump supporters some exuberant, some hellbent had been storm-tossed together into infamy. A mob overran the nations Capitol, as lawmakers hid in fear. Wholesale vandalism. Tear gas. Gunfire. A woman dead; an officer dead; many injured. Chants of U.S.A.! U.S.A.!
But the insurrection failed.
It had been the culmination of a sustained assault by the president and his enablers on fact-based reality, one that began long before the November election but took on a fevered urgency as the certainty of Mr. Trumps defeat solidified. For years, he had demonized political opponents and the media and egged on thuggish behavior at his rallies.
Since losing to Joseph R. Biden Jr., he had mounted a campaign of lies that the presidency was being stolen from him, and that marching on the Capitol was the last chance to stop it. To many Americans, it looked like one more feel-good rally to salve Mr. Trumps wounded ego, but some of his supporters heard something altogether different a battle cry.
Now, dozens of them have been arrested including an armed Alabama man who had Molotov cocktails in his car and a West Virginia lawmaker charged with illegally entering the Capitol and the Federal Bureau of Investigation is asking for help in identifying those who actively instigated violence. Many participants in the march are frantically working to erase digital evidence of their presence for fear of losing a job or being harassed online.
Mr. Trump, meanwhile, has been broadly condemned and cut off from his social media megaphones, as a new administration prepares to take power.
Kevin Haag, 67, a retired landscaper from North Carolina who ascended the Capitol steps as the crowd surged forward, said he did not go inside and disapproved of those who did. Even so, he said he would never forget the sense of empowerment as he looked down over thousands of protesters. It felt so good, he said, to show people: We are here. See us! Notice us! Pay attention!
Now, back home after several days of reflection, Mr. Haag, an evangelical Christian, wonders whether he went too far. Should I get down on my knees and ask for forgiveness? he said in an interview. I am asking myself that question.
But the experience seemed to have only hardened the resolve of others. Couy Griffin, 47, a Republican county commissioner from New Mexico, spoke of organizing another Capitol rally soon one that could result in blood running out of that building in a video he later posted to the Facebook page of his group, Cowboys for Trump.
At the end of the day, you mark my word, we will plant our flag on the desk of Nancy Pelosi and Chuck Schumer, he said. He paused before adding, And Donald J. Trump if it boils down to it.
The advance publicity for the March for America had been robust. Beyond the repeated promotions in tweets by the president and his allies, the upcoming event was cheered on social media, including Twitter, Facebook and Instagram.
But woven through many of the messages to stand up for Mr. Trump and, if possible, block the congressional certification of the election he claimed he had won was language that flirted with aggression, even violence.
For example, the term Storm the Capitol was mentioned 100,000 times in the 30 days preceding Jan. 6, according to Zignal Labs, a media insights company. Many of these mentions appeared in viral tweet threads that discussed the possible storming of the Capitol and included details on how to enter the building.
To followers of QAnon, the convoluted collection of conspiracy theories that falsely claims the country is dominated by deep-state bureaucrats and Democrats who worship Satan, the word storm had particular resonance. Adherents have often referred to a coming storm, after which Mr. Trump would preside over a new government order.
In online discussions, some QAnon followers and militia groups explored which weapons and tools to bring. Pack a crowbar, read one message posted on Gab, a social media refuge for the far right. In another discussion, someone asked, Does anyone know if the windows on the second floor are reinforced?
Still, the many waves of communication did not appear to result in a broadly organized plan to take action. It is also unclear if any big money or coordinated fund-raising was behind the mobilization, though some Trump supporters appear to have found funds through opaque online networks to help pay for transportation to the rally.
Patriots, if you need financial help getting to DC to support President Trump on January 6th, please go to my website, a QAnon adherent who identified himself as Thad Williams, of Tampa, Fla., posted on Twitter three days before the event. He said he had raised more than $27,000. (After the Capitol assault, the money transfer companies PayPal and Stripe shut down his accounts. Mr. Williams did not return a phone message, but the website for his organization, Joy In Liberty, said it had given out $30,000 to fund transportation for deserving patriots.)
Other rally goers set up fund-raising accounts through the online service GoFundMe; Buzzfeed News cited at least a dozen, and GoFundMe has since closed them.
One of the most conspicuous figures in the Capitol assault a bare-chested man with a painted face, flag-draped spear and fur hat with horns was linked to the online fund-raising. A familiar presence at pro-Trump rallies in Phoenix, Jacob Anthony Chansley, a 33-year-old voice-over actor, is known as the Q Shaman. He started a GoFundMe account in December to help pay for transportation to another Trump demonstration in Washington, but the effort reportedly netted him just $10. Mr. Chansley retweeted Mr. Williamss funding offer on Jan. 3, but it is unclear whether he benefited from it.
On Tuesday, the eve of the march, a couple thousand people gathered at Freedom Plaza in Washington for The Rally to Save America event, permitted as The Rally to Revival. The disparate interests of those attending were reflected by the speakers: well-known evangelists, alt-right celebrities (Alex Jones of Infowars) and Trump loyalists, including his former national security adviser Michael Flynn and the self-described Republican dirty trickster Roger Stone, both of whom he had pardoned.
The speakers repeatedly encouraged the attendees to see themselves as foot soldiers fighting to save the country. Americans, Mr. Flynn said, were ready to bleed for freedom.
The members of the House of Representatives, the members of the United States Senate, those of you who are feeling weak tonight, those of you that dont have the moral fiber in your body, get some tonight, he said. Because tomorrow, we the people are going to be here and we want you to know we will not stand for a lie.
Then came tomorrow.
It was President Trumps turn. At about noon on Wednesday, he emerged from a viewing party in a tent, strode onto a stage set up in a park just south of the White House and, for more than an hour, delivered a stream of inflammatory words.
He exhorted the crowd of more than 8,000 to march to the Capitol to pressure lawmakers: Because youll never take back our country with weakness. You have to show strength and you have to be strong.
Even before he had finished speaking, people started moving east toward the Capitol. The crowd included supporters who had come by caravan from across the country, Trump flags rippling in the wind, as well as people so moved by the presidents appeal for support that they had jumped into their cars and driven for hours.
They traveled from various corners of resentment in 21st-century America. Whether motivated by a sense of economic disenfranchisement or distrust of government, by bigotry, or conspiracy or a belief that Mr. Trump is Gods way of preparing for the Rapture, they shared a fealty to the president.
Now the moment had come, a moment that twinned the thrilling with the ominous.
Im happy, sad, afraid, excited, said Scott Cyganiewicz, 56, a floor installer from Gardner, Mass., as he watched the throngs of Trump loyalists streaming through the streets. Its an emotional roller coaster.
Mr. Cyganiewicz said he was on his way out of town. He did not want to be around if violence broke out. Only a portion of the broader crowd continued onto the Capitol grounds.
Soon word spread that Vice President Mike Pence who would oversee the pro forma count by Congress of the electoral votes for certification had announced he would not be complicit in the presidents efforts to overturn the election.
You can imagine the emotion that ran through people when we get that word, said Mr. Griffin, the county commissioner from New Mexico, in a video he posted on social media. And then we get down to the Capitol and they have all the inauguration set up for Joe Biden.
He added, What do you think was going to happen?
Many in the crowd spoke portentously of violence or even of another Civil War. A man named Jeff, who said he was an off-duty police officer from York County, Pa., said he didnt know what would happen after he and his wife Amy reached the Capitol. But he felt ready to participate if something were to erupt.
Theres a lot of people here willing to take orders, he said. If the orders are given, the people will rise up.
By the time the bulk of the crowd reached the building, its leading edge had metastasized into an angry mob. A man barked into a megaphone: Keep moving forward! Fight for Trump, fight for Trump!
Military Tribunals! Hang them! shouted someone wearing a cowboy hat.
Arrest Congress! screamed a woman in a flag scarf.
People surged past a few Capitol Police officers to bang on the windows and doors. Many eyewitness accounts and videos have since emerged that convey the pandemonium as hundreds of people overwhelmed the inadequate law-enforcement presence. In several instances of role reversal, for example, rioters are seen firing what appeared to be pepper spray at police officers trying to prevent mobs from getting closer to the Capitol Building.
After a few minutes, the crowd broke through and began streaming into an empty office. Glass shards crunched under peoples feet, as the scene descended into chaos.
Some stood in awe, while others took action. As one group prepared to break through an entryway, a Trump supporter raised a wine bottle and shouted, Whose way? To which the crowd responded, Our way!
Confusion reigned. Hey whats the Senate side? said a tall man in camouflage and sunglasses. Wheres the Senate? Can somebody Google it?
All the while, members of The Oath Keepers, a self-proclaimed citizens militia, seemed to be standing guard for the transgressors. They wore olive-drab shirts, helmets and patches on their upper-left sleeves that said, Guardians of the Republic and Not on Our Watch.
American flags flapped beside Trump 2020 flags, and people wearing Make America Great Again regalia moved beside people wearing anti-Semitic slogans. Chants of Hell No, Never Joe and Stop the Steal broke out, as did strains of God Bless America and The Star-Spangled Banner.
Derrick Evans of West Virginia, who just two months before had been elected as a Republican state delegate, wandered the halls of the Capitol Building, filming himself and joining in the occasional chant. At one point he shouted, Derrick Evans is in the Capitol!
Outside the building, Mr. Griffin, who was once photographed wearing a 10-gallon hat and sitting across from President Trump in the Oval Office, was now gleefully addressing the camera from atop one of the crowded terraces, declaring it a great day for America. Asserting that we came peacefully, he was interrupted by a man wearing a jacket with a hand-grenade logo, who said, Believe me, we are well armed if we need to be.
Amid the cheers and whoops of excitement were questions of what to do next. Some can be heard hunting for specific members of congress, including House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, whose office was broken into by several people. She and other lawmakers were hiding for fear of their safety.
One image showed a trim man moving through the Senate chamber in full paramilitary regalia: camouflage uniform, Kevlar vest, a mask and baseball cap obscuring his face. He carried a stack of flex cuffs the plastic restraints used by police. The image raised a question yet to be answered: Why carry restraints if not to use them?
Several rioters wielded fire extinguishers. One stood on a balcony on the Capitol buildings west side, spraying down on police officers trying to fend off the crowd. Others carried them into the building itself, one into Statuary Hall and another onto the steps outside the Senate Chamber, spraying in the direction of journalists and police officers.
Our president wants us here, a man can be heard saying during a livestream video that showed him standing within the Capitol building. We wait and take orders from our president.
Despite his followers hopes and expectations, President Trump was missing in action as rioters rampaged through the halls of Congress. It would be hours before he eventually surfaced in a somewhat subdued videotaped appeal for them to leave.
We have to have peace, he said. So go home, we love you, youre very special.
Some of Mr. Trumps supporters expressed frustration, even disbelief, that the president seemed to have given up after they had put themselves on the line for him.
Mr. Haag, the retired landscaper, was among the disappointed. Still, he said, the movement will continue even without Mr. Trump.
We are representing the 74 million people who got disenfranchised, he said. We are still out here. We are a force to be reckoned with. We are not going away.
One man wandered away from the Capitol in the evening gloom, yelling angrily through a megaphone that Mr. Pence was a coward and, now, Mr. Trump had told everyone to just go home.
Well, he can go home to his Mar-a-Lago estate, the man shouted, adding, We gotta go back to our businesses that are closed!
In the aftermath of what Mitch McConnell, the Senate majority leader, called a failed insurrection, scores of those who responded to the incendiary words of the president now face a reckoning.
A chief target of investigators will be whoever struck Brian Sicknick of the Capitol Police with a fire extinguisher; the 42-year-old officer died Thursday after being injured in the riot. At the same time, authorities are investigating the fatal police shooting of Ashli Babbitt, 35, an Air Force veteran who had joined those breaching the Capitol.
Among those charged so far with federal crimes are Mr. Chansley, the so-called Q Shaman; Mr. Evans, the West Virginia lawmaker who resigned on Saturday; and Richard Barnett, an Arkansas man who was depicted in a widely circulated photograph sitting with his foot on a desk in Ms. Pelosis office.
Meanwhile, Mr. Griffin, the commissioner from New Mexico who runs Cowboys for Trump, saw his groups Twitter account suspended and calls for his resignation.
The anger, resentment and conspiracy-laced distrust that led to Wednesdays mayhem did not dissipate with Thursdays dawn. Along with the smashed furniture in the Capitol Building, there were smashed expectations of a continued Trump presidency, of lawmakers held to account, of holy prophecies fulfilled.
Signs of potential violence have already surfaced. Twitter, which terminated Mr. Trumps account on Friday, noted that plans for future armed protests have already begun proliferating online, including a proposed secondary attack on the U.S. Capitol and state capitol buildings on January 17.
The urge for more civil unrest is being discussed in the usual squalid corners of the internet. Private chat groups on Gab and Parler are peppered with talk of a possible Million Militia March on Jan. 20 that would disrupt the presidential inauguration of Mr. Biden.
There is chatter about ride shares, where to find lodging in the Washington area and what to bring. Baseball bats, perhaps, or assault rifles.
We took the building once, one commenter posted, we can take it again.
Reporting was contributed by Sabrina Tavernise, Sheera Frenkel, David D. Kirkpatrick, Campbell Robertson, Mark Scheffler and Haley Willis.
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Our President Wants Us Here: The Mob That Stormed the Capitol - The New York Times
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Self -proclaimed Proud Boy member one of 21 Texans facing charges in connection with Capitol riot – San Antonio Express-News
Posted: at 7:34 pm
A Houston police officer and a self-proclaimed Proud Boy were two of the Texans who have been arrested by the FBI for their alleged involvement in the deadly Capitol riots last month.
After Monday, 21 Texans have been arrested in connection with the events on Jan. 6 in Washington, D.C., and are facing a variety of charges.
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Daniel Goodwyn, from Cornith, is a self-proclaimed Proud Boy who was seen at the Capitol in a livestream video, according to court documents.
A self-proclaimed member of the Proud Boys from Cornith was arrested on Jan. 29 after appearing on another suspect's livestream video, according to a criminal complaint
Officials said Goodwyn can be seen and is called by name in a video taken by Anthime Joseph Gionet, also known as "Baked Alaska." Gionet has also been arrested on charges stemming from the Capitol riots. Goodwyn was escorted out of the Capitol, calling the officer who escorted him out an oathbreaker and yelled for rioters to take the officers badge number as he left, the criminal complaint said.
On Instagram, Goodwyn said he was inside the Capitol but only stayed for a few minutes and didn't break anything.
Charges: Knowingly entering or remaining in a restricted building or grounds without lawful authority;violent entry and disorderly conduct on Capitol Grounds
Nolan Cooke, from Savoy, was arrested after allegedly helping break through the Capitol police gates, according to court documents.
The 22-year-old man from Savoy was arrested on Jan. 21 after three people informed the FBI about Snapchat photos that showed Cooke "helped lead the charge of rioters breaking through the police gates," officials said.
Cooke recorded the incident on a GoPro around his neck before posting video to Instagram, Snapchat and TikTok, an arrest affidavit said. He also posted photos of himself and an unnamed girlfriend with the caption I wouldnt want anyone other than you with me to take on the revolution," the affidavit said.
He told officials that he went to the Capitol because he wanted to be heard, according to the affidavit.
Charges: Acts during civil disorder; entering/remaining on restricted buildings or grounds and disorderly/ disruptive conduct in or near restricted buildings or grounds; unlawful activities on Capitol grounds
Tam Dinh Pham, a Houston police officer, was arrested after telling officials he just went into the Capitol to "see history," according to court documents.
Pham, a Houston police officer, was arrested on Jan. 20 after telling FBI agents that he only went into the Capitol to "see history," not to vandalize or be violent, according to a statement of facts.
The 18-year veteran initially told officials that he went to Washington D.C. for business reasons. When officials asked to look through his phone, they found deleted photos and videos of him inside the Capitol, the court documents said.
He told officials he only looked at the art in the Capitol, took some photographs and left after 15 minutes, according to the court documents.
Charges: Knowingly entering or remaining in a restricted building or grounds without lawful authority;violent entry and disorderly conduct on Capitol Grounds
Joshua Loller, of Spring, was arrested after video footage showed him clashing with Capitol police, court documents said.
The Spring man was arrested on Jan. 15 after a tipster showed police photos and video from Loller's Facebook account of him inside the Capitol confronting Metropolitan police officers, a statement of facts said.
An officer's body camera footage also shows Loller on the front lines fighting with police to enter the Capitol, according to the court documents.
Charges: Knowingly entering or remaining in a restricted building or grounds without lawful authority; violent entry and disorderly conduct on Capitol Grounds; obstructing or impeding law enforcement officer during civil disorder and obstructing federally protected functions
Kissing Tree Vineyards owner and Bruceville-Eddy resident Christopher Grider was arrested after admitting on TV that he was in the Capitol near where a woman was shot and killed, according to an arrest affidavit.
The Bruceville-Eddy man and owner of Kissing Tree Vineyards was arrested Jan. 21 in Austin after telling a Waco TV station that he was in the Capitol during the riots. He told reporters that he was within feet of Ashli Babbitt, the woman was who killed by Capitol police outside the House chambers, an arrest affidavit said. During his TV interview, Grider said "The president asked people to come and show their support. I feel like it's the least we can do, it's kind of why I came from central Texas all the way to D.C."
Officials also believe Grider handed a man a black helmet that was then used to break the glass doors of the Capitol in which Babbitt eventually attempted to jump through. Video footage shows Grider trying to push and kick the doors open, the affidavit said.
He was arrested by the U.S. Marshals Service and taken to Washington D.C. for arraignment.
Charges: Government property or contracts; knowingly entering or remaining in a restricted building or grounds without lawful authority; violent entry and disorderly conduct on Capitol Grounds
Chance Uptmore, circled in red, and his father James "Sonny" Uptmore, in the blue mask in front, were arrested by the FBI after photos emerged of them at the Capitol riots.
The San Antonio father and son were arrested Jan. 26 after a tipster told the FBI about comments and photos on Chance's Facebook page detailing his time inside the Capitol. Chance had posted that the violence was "minimal" and that he was trying to help the police stop other rioters, a criminal complaint said. Images of himinside the Capitol were captured by news coverage of the event.
Chance later admitted to authorities that he and his father James entered the Capitol because they were "caught up in the crowd and it was a once in a lifetime event," according to court documents.
Charges:Knowingly entering or remaining in a restricted building or grounds without lawful authority and impeding or disrupting official functions; violent entry and disorderly conduct on Capitol Grounds
Daniel Phipps, a Dallas-area man, was arrested after posting to Facebook photos of himself in the Capitol.
The Dallas-area man was arrested Jan. 26 after a witness told Fort Worth police about a photo Phipps posted on Facebook inside the Capitol with an American flag draped over his shoulder, a criminal complaint said. Under the photo, Phipps wrote a comment that he was in Washington, D.C., and "helped take the Hill."
Charges: Knowingly entering or remaining in a restricted building or grounds without lawful authority and impeding or disrupting official functions; violent entry and disorderly conduct on Capitol Grounds
Nicholas DeCarlo, from Burelson, was arrested by the FBI after photos emerged of him inside the Capitol wearing a "Murder the Media" shirt.
The 30-year-old Burleson man was arrested on Jan. 26 after he gave an interview to the Los Angeles Times on Jan. 13 in which he admitted to being in the Capitol with another man named Nicholas Ochs, who has also been arrested by the FBI, a statement of facts said. DeCarlo said the two men were working as journalists but neither are listed as a credentialed reporter with the House or Senate Periodical Press Gallery. In a photo from Jan. 6, DeCarlo is wearing a shirt that says "Murder the Media," standing next to the same message etched into a Capitol wall, court documents said.
According to court documents, photos were posted to Twitter that showed him smoking in the Capitol with Ochs. Additional videos were posted on Twitter of Ochs and Decarlo speaking about how they were able to "stop the steal" by storming the Capitol, the FBI said.
Charges: Obstructing or impeding any official proceeding; knowingly entering or remaining in a restricted building or grounds without lawful authority; parading or demonstrating on Capitol grounds
Garret Miller, a Dallas-area man, was arrested after surveillance footage showed him storming the Capitol on Jan. 6.
Miller was arrested Jan. 20 after surveillance footage purportedly shows the Dallas-area man was part of the group that first stormed the U.S. Capitol, a statement of facts said. Miller also detailed his activities inside the building on social media, including a video posted to his public Twitter account and photos on Facebook with "just wanted to incriminate myself a little lol" as a caption, according to officials.
Miller also made threats on Twitter, saying it was "hunting season" and called for the assassination of U.S. Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, officials said. He also threatened the officer who fatally shot a rioter inside the Capitol, saying supporters should "hug his neck with a nice rope," according to officials.
CHARGES: Knowingly entering or remaining in a restricted building or grounds without lawful authority; violent entry or disorderly conduct on Capitol grounds; obstructing or impeding any official proceeding; certain acts during lawful civil disorder
Video of Matthew Mazzocco, a San Antonio resident, appeared in videos of him at the Capitol riot, according to court documents.
The 37-year-old San Antonio man was arrested Jan. 17 after purported videos of him at the Capitol appeared on TikTok.
Multiple tipsters led officials to Mazzocco after he posted photos from the Capitol on Facebook, including in a group for a youth sports league. Twitter users also tagged the San Antonio FBI account with videos of Mazzocco inside the Capitol, where he was "telling others not to take or destroy anything, and that they were probably going to get in trouble for what they were doing," a statement of facts said.
CHARGES: Entering or remaining in a restricted building or grounds without lawful authority; violent entry or disorderly conduct on Capitol grounds
Larry Rendall Brock, of Grapevine, was spotted by his ex-wife in photos that emerged from the riots, who then notified the FBI, a statement of facts said.
The Grapevine man was arrested Jan. 10 after his ex-wife called the FBI to say she recognized him in a photo inside the Capitol building wearing a patch and pilot wings from his military service.
A YouTube video showed a man resembling Brock's driver's license photo walking out of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi's office wearing a military-style helmet, body armor and holding flex-cuffs, according to the criminal complaint.
CHARGES: Entering or remaining in a restricted building or grounds without lawful authority; violent entry or disorderly conduct on Capitol grounds
Jenny Louise Cudd and Eliel Rosa, of Texas, posted a livestream on Facebook of them storming the Capitol, the FBI said in a statement of facts.
Cudd and Rosa were arrested Jan. 12.
Officials said the two were seen on surveillance footage entering the Capitol and taking photos of the rotunda before walking around outside the upper House doors. Cudd streamed a live video and Rosa posted pictures on Facebook from inside the Capitol, the FBI said. Cudd also participated in an interview with a Texas TV station in which she described what happened, saying we the Patriots did storm the U.S. Capitol," documents said. Later, when questioned, the FBI said Rosa admitted to entering the Capitol.
CHARGES: Entering a restricted building or grounds; violent entry or disorderly conduct
Gionet, known as "Baked Alaska" on social media, was arrested in Houston on Jan. 15 after livestreaming his time inside the Capitol.
Gionet livestreamed for 27 minutes and posted on social media sites DLive, YouTube and Twitter, documents show.
CHARGES: Entering or remaining in a restricted building or grounds without lawful authority; violent entry or disorderly conduct on Capitol grounds
Daniel Page Adams (right) of Texas and his cousin Cody Connell posted photos to Facebook, including the above photo, of them inside the Capitol, the FBI said in a statement of facts.
Adams was arrested Jan. 16 in East Texas after posting about the riot on Facebook, the FBI said.
Adams and his cousin Cody Page Carter Connell posted video on social media showing them pushing toward a line of Capital police officers and Adams "physically engaging with officers," documents show. Adams was clubbed and shot with rubber bullets, the FBI said.
CHARGES: Assaulting a federal officer; obstructing law enforcement engaged in official duties; incident to civil disorder; knowingly entering or remaining in a restricted building or grounds without lawful authority; violent entry or disorderly conduct on Capitol grounds
Alex Kirk Harkrider (rights) and Ryan Nichols posted photos and videos of themselves in front of smashed windows of Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi's office, a criminal complaint said.
Harkrider, 30, of Converse and Nichols, 32, of Longview were identified by friends on Facebook.
Witnesses shared photos and videos from Nichols' Facebook page and Snapchat account that showed the two inside the Capitol. One photo depicts them standing in front of smashed windows at Pelosi's office, a criminal complaint said.
Nichols was carrying a can of pepper spray and a crowbar while Harkrider carried a baton, the FBI said. Nichols also pepper-sprayed law enforcement, according to the FBI.
They were arrested Jan. 18 in East Texas.
CHARGES: Conspiracy and unlawful entry with a dangerous weapon; violent entry or disorderly conduct; assaulting a federal officer using a deadly or dangerous weapon; aiding and abetting
Guy Wesley Reffitt of Wylie, was caught on video from several news stations attempting to flush his eyes after getting pepper sprayed by police, a FBI affidavit said.
Video from Reuters and Fox News show the Wylie resident being pepper sprayed by police.
According to an arrest affidavit, Reffitt's son told officials he took his gun to the Capitol to "protect the country." His son also told officials that Reffitt said he "would have no option but to do what he had to do" and threatened to shoot his family if they turned him into the authorities, the FBI said.
He was arrested Jan. 18.
CHARGES: Entering or remaining in a restricted building or grounds without lawful authority; violent entry or disorderly conduct on Capitol grounds; obstruction of justice
Smocks posted on the social media platform Parler that he would be at the Capitol and planned on returning Jan. 19 with far-right groups that would "come in numbers that no standing army or police agency can match," FBI documents show.
According to the FBI, Smocks also told his social media followers they needed to "hunt theses cowards down like the traitors that each of them are." He also said to target certain groups, including democrats.
He was arrested Jan. 15.
CHARGES: Threats in interstate commerce
Jenna Ryan, a Frisco realtor was arrested after livestreaming herself inside the Capitol during the riots.
The Frisco real estate agent, who took a private plane to Washington, D.C., was arrested Jan. 15 after livestreaming herself at the Capitol calling it the "best day of her life," the FBI said.
One video posted before the riots, Ryan is talking to a bathroom mirror saying "We're going to go down and storm the Capitol. They're down there right now and that's why we came and so that's what we are going to do. So wish me luck," a statement of facts said. Later, as she was inside the Capitol, she said "Y'all know who to hire for your realtor, Jenna Ryan for your realtor," the court documents said.
After her arrest, she asked Trump to pardon her, CBS11 reported. She told the news station "I dont feel a sense of shame or guilty from my heart. I feel like I was basically following my president."
CHARGES: Knowingly entering or remaining in a restricted building or grounds without lawful authority; disorderly conduct on Capitol grounds
Taylor Pettaway is a breaking news and general assignment reporter for ExpressNews.com | taylor.pettaway@express-news.net | @TaylorPettaway
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Two Proud Boys face conspiracy charges over the US Capitol riot – Vox.com
Posted: at 7:34 pm
Two members of the Proud Boys, a far-right hate group, have been charged with conspiracy for their involvement in the violent storming of the US Capitol on January 6.
On Friday night, federal prosecutors announced the charges against Dominic Pezzola, 43, of Rochester, New York, and William Pepe, 31, of Beacon, New York, saying they engaged in a conspiracy to obstruct, influence, impede, and interfere with law enforcement officers engaged in their official duties in protecting the U.S. Capitol and its grounds on Jan. 6, 2021.
Pezzola and Pepe are not the first members of an organized far-right group to face conspiracy charges. Three members of the Oath Keepers, a right-wing militia group, have also been charged for their participation in the attempted insurrection.
The two Proud Boys had previously faced other, lesser charges; at least four other members of their group face lesser charges as well, including obstructing a congressional proceeding. More than 170 other people have also faced lesser charges, such as for unlawful entry and disorderly conduct, for their part in the bloody incident, which left five people dead and more than 140 police officers injured. At least two police officers who were present during the siege have since died by suicide.
According to a Justice Department press release announcing the charges, Pezzola and Pepe allegedly seized protective equipment from police, including the short metal barricades erected around the grounds of the Capitol. Video from the day shows rioters ripping down that fencing, overwhelming Capitol Police officers. Other video shows some police officers moving barricades themselves.
Pezzola and Pepe are also accused of the stealing and purloining of property belonging to Capitol Police. Specifically, Pezzola is accused of stealing a riot shield from a Capitol Police officer and later using it to smash a window of the Capitol building; the release notes he is apparently depicted doing so in video and photos from the day.
Pepe was arrested on January 12, and Pezzola was arrested on January 15. According to the DOJ press release, both have also been charged with civil disorder; unlawfully entering restricted buildings or grounds; and disorderly and disruptive conduct in restricted buildings or grounds.
Additionally, Pezzola was charged with obstruction of an official proceeding; additional counts of civil disorder and aiding and abetting civil disorder; robbery of personal property of the United States; assaulting, resisting, or impeding certain officers; destruction of government property; and engaging in physical violence in a restricted buildings or grounds.
These charges stem from his alleged theft and misuse of the riot shield. Pezzola was also allegedly part of the mob of mainly white men who were led on a chase by Eugene Goodman, a Black Capitol Police officer, who sought to keep the insurrectionists away from lawmakers. The pursuit was captured on video, and led to praise and a position of honor at Bidens inauguration for Goodman.
Two Montana brothers who also allegedly chased Goodman were charged Friday with nine counts, including destruction of property, related to their role in the siege.
According to the New York Times, Pezzola is a former US Marine, and Pepe worked for the Metropolitan Transportation Authority. Both were affiliated with the Proud Boys, which promotes Western culture as a front for racist, xenophobic, and anti-Semitic ideologies.
The group openly and enthusiastically backed former President Donald Trump throughout his term in office, and Trump declined to condemn them and other white supremacist organizations during a debate with now-President Joe Biden in October.
Instead, Trump encouraged the group to stand back and stand by. That phrase was taken up as encouragement, and almost immediately landed on official merchandise for the group.
In the weeks and months after Trump lost his reelection bid, Proud Boys have been a recurring presence at so-called Stop the Steal protests, which falsely claimed that the national election had been stolen by the Biden camp. Some of these protests turned violent, with multiple people stabbed in Washington, DC, and one person shot in Washington state during rallies in early December that also featured Proud Boys assaulting counterprotesters and passersby, as well as desecrating Black churches.
According to the Times, Pezzola is being represented by attorney Michael Scibetta, who said Friday night that he has not been able to see his client or the federal charging papers.
Less than a week after the insurrection, federal law enforcement officials promised that arrests would continue, and that initial charges then limited to things like theft of public property and violent entry were only the beginning.
Indicting members of hate groups on federal conspiracy charges as opposed to the more easily proven unlawful entry and disorderly conduct charges represents a push by the DOJ to keep that promise, and to prove the insurrectionists collaborated in efforts to break the law.
Generally speaking, federal conspiracy charges can carry a maximum penalty of five years in prison, although this sentence can be compounded by other offenses.
Notably, two people do not need to know one anothers identity in order to have conspired together so even participants in an online forum, on which real names are not exchanged, can be charged as co-conspirators. Moreover, the specific role each conspirator was meant to play does not need to be proven, only that a particular federal crime was planned and then occurred.
One question in proving a conspiracy case is likely to be to what extent the January 6 riots were planned in advance.
According to the New York Times, federal investigators have found evidence in Pezzolas home suggesting he had been studying homemade explosives. There is less public evidence against Pepe, and Pepes attorney, Susanne Brody, declined comment about the case against Pepe to the Times and CNN.
But there is evidence to support the argument that there was advance planning for the action at the Capitol. As Rebecca Heilweil and Shirin Ghaffary of Recode have reported, online extremists began organizing for offline action almost immediately after the November 3 presidential election.
On both mainstream social media and the smaller platforms favored by far-right extremists, members of the mob planned their trips to Washington well in advance of the violence that eventually unfolded. And those same services hosted livestreams and videos of the insurrection; Pezzola, for example, filmed himself smoking a victory cigar from inside the Capitol.
It will ultimately be up to federal investigators and the judicial system to determine whether online chatter or even in-person actions on the day of the riot will translate to convictions on conspiracy charges. According to court documents reported by the Washington Post, Assistant US Attorney Erik Kenerson described Pezzolas actions as showing planning, determination, and coordination.
So far, three other people have also been charged with federal conspiracy in connection with the Capitol riots. On Wednesday, the DOJ announced that charges had been brought against Jessica Marie Watkins and Donovan Ray Crowl, both of Champaign County, Ohio; and Thomas Caldwell of Clarke County, Virginia, for conspiracy, obstructing an official proceeding, destruction of government property, and unlawful entry on restricted building or grounds.
All three are affiliated with Oath Keepers, an anti-government paramilitary organization founded shortly after the election of President Barack Obama. According to the New York Times, at least 10 other people bearing insignias of that far-right group were spotted during the riots.
Watkins and Crowl are also members of an Ohio-based militia, according to the DOJ press release. The three indicted Oath Keepers are alleged to have communicated with one another both before and during the attack on the Capitol. They face up to 20 years in prison.
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Two Proud Boys face conspiracy charges over the US Capitol riot - Vox.com
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One Of The Proud Boys Who Stormed The Capitol Had Instructions For Making Guns And Bombs In His Home, FBI Says – BuzzFeed News
Posted: at 7:34 pm
The FBI has found hundreds of files of detailed instructions on how to make guns, poisons, and bombs in the home of a man arrested for participating in the Jan. 6 insurrection at the Capitol.
Dominic Pezzola a member of the Proud Boys, an extremist pro-Trump group was caught in pictures and videos smashing in a window of the Capitol building with a police shield, allowing rioters to get in, the FBI found. In a memo arguing that Pezzola should be jailed ahead of his trial, the government also accuses him of overtaking a line of police in riot gear and being in the group of people who chased Officer Eugene Goodman up the stairs near the Senate chamber.
The memo details an interview with a witness, who told the FBI that Pezzola, known online as Spaz, was part of a group of people who stormed the Capitol, all of whom had firearms or access to firearms and had said that they planned to kill every single 'm-fer' they can.
The witness also said that Pezzola and his group would have killed Mike Pence if given the chance.
After the insurrection, Pezzola at first tried to flee, the memo states, turning off his phone, shaving his wild beard, and leaving his home in the Rochester, New York, area. After the FBI began knocking on the doors of family members, he turned himself in. Then, the FBI conducted a search of his house.
The memo states that the FBI found a thumb drive in a room that appeared to be used exclusively by the defendant containing hundreds of files with these and similar titles: Advanced Improvised Explosives, Explosive Dusts, Incendiaries, The Box Tube MAC-11: The Ultimate DIY Machine Pistol, Ragnars Big Book of Homemade Weapons, and The Advanced Anarchists Arsenal: Recipes for Improvised Incendiaries and Explosives.
Pezzola poses both a serious danger to the community and a serious risk of flight, the memo states. The circumstances of the offenses charged in this case overwhelmingly support detention. The seriousness of the offenses with which the defendant is charged cannot be overstated.
He was arrested in New York and is currently being held as he awaits a hearing. A judge will determine whether to continue his detention as the case moves through the courts. He is currently charged with destroying government property, obstructing an official proceeding (the congressional vote to validate Joe Bidens presidential win), and entering the Capitol.
The memo and an affidavit submitted by an FBI agent track Pezzolas progress up to and inside of the Capitol through a series of videos and images posted to Parler and other social media platforms. The images appear to show him wrestling with a line of police and grabbing one of their shields before climbing up to a window of the Capitol and smashing his way in, along with others around him. Once inside, the files state, he and members of the group he was with attempted to pressure a police officer into telling them where members of Congress were. The videos and pictures appear to show him with an earpiece, a device others who stormed the Capitol have been pictured wearing as well. The videos also show him smoking a cigar near the Senate chamber, saying, I knew we could take this motherfucker over [if we] just tried hard enough.
In some of the social media posts the FBI attributed to Pezzola, he identifies as a member of the Proud Boys, who had a heavy presence at the Jan. 6 riot, as well as a veteran of the Marines. A tattoo on his right arm signifies the Infantry Assault Marine military occupational specialty, according to the Daily Beast.
His next hearing, on whether to keep him in detention, will be on Feb. 1.
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Dustin Diamond, Screech on ‘Saved by the Bell,’ Dies at 44 – Hollywood Reporter
Posted: at 7:32 pm
Dustin Diamond, who spent 13 seasons as the goofy nerd Screech on the Saturday morning sitcom Saved by the Bell and its various iterations before his life and career took a turn for the worse, died Monday. He was 44.
The cause of death was carcinoma, his rep, Roger Paul, told The Hollywood Reporter. The actorwas diagnosed with stage 4 cancer three weeks ago and was receiving treatments at a Florida hospital.
"In that time, it managed to spread rapidly throughout his system; the only mercy it exhibited was its sharp and swift execution," Paul said in a statement. "Dustin did not suffer. He did not have to lie submerged in pain. For that, we are grateful."
When he was 11 and in the fifth grade, Diamond beat out 5,000 other hopefuls in 1988 to land the role of Samuel "Screech" Powers on the Disney Channel comedy Good Morning, Miss Bliss, the forerunner to Saved by the Bell.
Viewers watched Diamond grow up before their eyes as he continued as the chess-loving Screech on Saved by the Bell, which lasted four seasons (1989-93), Saved by the Bell: The College Years (one primetime season, 1993-94) and Saved by the Bell: The New Class (seven seasons, 1994-2000), all on NBC. When the last episode aired, Diamond was 23.
"The hardest thing about being a child star is giving up your childhood. You don't get a childhood, really," he said in a Where Are They Now? interview for OWN in 2013. "You're a performer, you have to know your lines and rehearse and practice, making sure you are the funniest and the best you can be. Because if you weren't funny, you could be replaced."
In the ensuing years, Diamond began a new career as a stand-up comic (he said he had been favorably compared to George Carlin); beat up a much older Ron Palillo (Arnold Horshack of Welcome Back, Kotter) on Celebrity Boxing 2; shed some pounds on Celebrity Fit Club; entered the ring with Dennis Rodman and Frank Stallone on Hulk Hogan's Celebrity Championship Wrestling; and appeared on World's Dumbest and Celebrity Big Brother.
In 2006, Diamond was behind Screeched Saved by the Smell, a 52-minute sex tape that involved him and two women. Later, he said that a "stunt person" stood in for him, with his face added during editing.
"It's the thing I'm most embarrassed about," he said. "The rumor that I think had been put on TV was that Paris Hilton had made $14 million off [her] sex tape. My buddy said, 'Fourteen million? Holy smokes! Where's the Screech sex tape? You've got to be worth at least a million.' I thought, 'Yeah, maybe.' I got some money off of it, but it wasn't worth the fallout."
Three years later, Diamond shared salacious behind-the-scenes tales about his TV show in the book Behind the Bell. After it came out, he said it was ghostwritten and he wasn't given a chance to remove some of the stories that were created from some "offhand" comments that he had made to the real author.
In 2015, Diamond was convicted of disorderly conduct after he stabbed another bar patron in the armpit with a switchblade on Christmas Day 2014 in an incident involving his then-fiancee. He served three months in jail before being released in April 2016.
When the Peacock streaming service unveiled a follow-up Saved by the Bell series in November, original stars including Mark-Paul Gosselaar, Elizabeth Berkley, Mario Lopez and Tiffani Thiessen were back, but Diamond was not. Screech, it was explained, was living on the International Space Station with Kevin, the robot pal that he built.
"We are aware that Dustin is not considered reputable by most. He's had a history of mishaps, of unfortunate events," Paul said. "We want the public to understand that he was not intentionally malevolent. He much like the rest of those who act out and behave poorly had undergone a great deal of turmoil and heartache. His actions, though rebukable, stemmed from loss and the lack of knowledge on how to process that pain properly. In actuality, Dustin was a humorous and high-spirited individual whose greatest passion was to make others laugh. He was able to sense and feel other peoples' emotions to such a length that he was able to feel them too a strength and a flaw, all in one."
Born on Jan. 7, 1977, in San Jose, California, Dustin Neil Diamond attended Zion Lutheran School in Anaheim. His folks worked in the computer industry.
After Gosselaar was hired to star as Zack Morris on Good Morning, Miss Bliss, he pushed for the blue-eyed Diamond to get the part of his best friend in junior high, Screech. (Diamond had appeared in 1987 on the syndicated TV comedy It's a Living and in 1988 in the film Big Top Pee-wee.)
"The thing is, I was 11 when we started, and [his castmates] were 14, 15 years old," he said. "I was kind of like the tag-along brother; when they were going into college, I was just going into high school. And at that age, it's a huge difference. I was wacky and I was wild and real hyper."
As he longed for Lisa Turtle (Lark Voorhies) and shared his first onscreen kiss with Violet Bickerstaff (Tori Spelling), Screech remained at the center of Saved by the Bell and its offshoots as the franchise moved to the fictional schools of Bayside High and California University and then back to Bayside, where Screech was now the assistant to bumbling Principal Belding (Dennis Haskins).
In 2006, it was reported that Diamond was selling T-shirts at $15 a pop in an attempt to stave off a foreclosure of his home in Port Washington, Wisconsin. He said he had filed for bankruptcy protection in California in 2001 and had gotten into a financial hole because his parents had spent money he had earned fromSaved by the Bell.
Diamond also showed up on the big screen in Made (2001), Pauly Shore Is Dead (2003), Dickie Roberts: Former Child Star (2003), Tetherball: The Movie (2010), All Wifed Out (2012) and College Fright Night(2014) and executive produced a 2014 Lifetime telefilm, The Unauthorized Saved by the Bell Story.
"I'm proud of the work that I've done when I've done it. It's just, how to you come off such a phenom role of this Screech character and break out of that mold and do something different?" he asked Lopez in a 2016 interview on Extra. "I'd audition, and every single time they'd say, 'Hey, we loved it, but we saw too much Screech in it.' Well, I can't change my bone structure, what do you want me to do?"
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Dustin Diamond, Screech on 'Saved by the Bell,' Dies at 44 - Hollywood Reporter
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Why Not Us: North Carolina Central University Men’s Basketball, from Executive Producers Chris Paul & Stephen A. Smith, to Debut as Part of New…
Posted: at 7:32 pm
The Undefeated and ESPN+ are partnering to deliver a year-round home on the industry-leading sports streaming service for stories at the intersection of sports, race and culture. Why Not Us: North Carolina Central University Mens Basketball, a new all-access docuseries executive produced by NBA All-StarChris Pauland ESPNs Stephen A. Smith is the first project to debut under The Undefeated on ESPN+.
Premiering February 12 exclusively on ESPN+, Why Not Us takes viewers behind the scenes of the North Carolina Central University (NCCU) mens basketball team. The eight-episode documentary series will examine the distinct culture, experiences and challenges of a Historically Black College and University (HBCU) athletic program, its coaches, staff and student-athletes. Presented by The Undefeated, Why Not Us is produced by Roadside Entertainment,Pauls Ohh Dip!!! Productions, Smiths Mr. SAS Inc., and ESPN+.
Why Not Us will spotlight the importance and uniqueness of HBCUs by chronicling the NCCU mens basketball team and the challenges they encounter throughout a season in my home state of North Carolina, said Paul. HBCUs face challenges to compete at the same level as PWIs due to lack of funding, resources and awareness. Despite the obstacles they face, Why Not Us shines a light on these amazing Black student athletes who attend HBCUs, and how these historically significant schools continue to enrich not only the Black community but our nation as a whole. It was important to tell this story with Roadside Entertainment as we have successfully partnered with them to tell a great story through Crossroads, another important documentary about inspirational Black athletes in North Carolina.
As a graduate of an HBCU Winston-Salem State University any issue that allows us to illuminate the great challenges that HBCUs perpetually face, yet overcome day-after-day, is something that is going to garner my interest, said Smith. After asking my coach, the late, great Clarence Big House Gaines, what I could do for him in return for all hes done for me, his answer was very simple: Do all you can for this university, for any HBCU. Dont let the world try and forget about it. This project is a step in that direction. Its not just a project or a piece of work. Its a mission. And Im incredibly delighted and grateful that Chris Paul and ESPN asked me to come on board to make this happen.
Why Not Us is exactly the right show for our audience and this cultural moment, and Chris and Stephen A. are the ideal duo to deliver it, said Brian Lockhart, vice president, ESPN Original Content and ESPN Films. It combines their sports passion with the incredible impact of HBCUs on Black life in America. Its authenticity is the new benchmark for the type of content were creating for ESPN+.
We are proud to bring our distinct brand of storytelling to ESPN+, and will continue to experiment and challenge convention, said Kevin Merida, Senior Vice President and Editor-in-Chief, The Undefeated. We are excited about the premiere of Why Not Us, and the attention this series gives to the vibrancy of HBCUs and the promise of their future.
The Undefeated on ESPN+, available now on the streaming platform,offers fans a dynamic platform for year-round premium Black storytelling with The Undefeated sensibilities. A dedicated new section for the collaboration launches today as home to new original content, curated collections and more, throughout the year on the sports streaming service. This represents The Undefeateds latest expansion across the Walt Disney Company.
Why Not Us: North Carolina Central University Mens Basketball
Why Not Us follows the NCCU mens basketball team during the 2020-21 season, exploring the stories of pioneering head coachLeVelle Moton (himself an HBCU graduate and former star basketball player at NCCU) and his staff, as they navigate a season unlike any other and help their players achieve greatness on and off the court. Moton overcame challenges along the way to becoming one of the most accomplished, though not widely-known, coaches in college basketball. He has raised the profile of NCCU since he took over in 2009, helping it transition from Division II to Division I, and along the way become a benchmark for success in basketball at HBCUs.
Video Trailer: Why Not Us: North Carolina Central University Mens Basketball
The series also highlights the ethos of being a student and student-athlete at an HBCU. Over the course of eight episodes, the viewer learns why HBCUs are much more than just repositories for colorful homecomings and the best marching bands in the world.Why Not Usspotlights the importance of these remarkable institutions, who have done more with less. HBCUs are a place that produces many of the very best and brightest among us, such asSpike Lee(Morehouse College),Oprah Winfrey(Tennessee State University),Thurgood Marshall(Lincoln University/Howard University Law School),Stacey Abrams(Spelman College), and the first African-American, Asian-American and female Vice-President,Kamala Harris(Howard University), to name a few.
Augmenting the eight-episode series, Paul will host intimate conversations with notable HBCU graduates, such as Academy Award-winning filmmakerSpike Lee(Morehouse, 79), actressTaraji P. Henson(Howard, 95), fashion designer and Fear of God founderJerry Lorenzo(Florida A&M, 00), Moton (NC Central, 96), and more. Rolling out over the course of the series, the conversations will also be available as part of The Undefeated on ESPN+.
Why Not Us co-executive producers Paul and Smith are both strong advocates for HBCUs across America.
Paul, who left Wake Forest University early before being selected No. 4 overall in the 2005 NBA Draft, is working toward a degree at Winston-Salem State University. He has actively supported HBCUs for years, most recently assisting HBCU voting initiatives and raising awareness through his HBCU Sneaker Tour when he wore shoes representing different HBCUs at each of his games in the NBA Bubble last summer. The HBCU sneakers were auctioned off with all of the proceeds donated to the mens and womens basketball programs of each school represented.
Paul partnered with Harvard Business School last year to bring its Entertainment, Media and Sports program to North Carolina A&T, creating the Special Topics in Management course to develop a pipeline for students pursuing careers in those industries. The course will expand to more HBCUs this year, helping to address emerging issues in business management related to sports, media and entertainment.
Smith played basketball on scholarship at Winston-Salem State University (under Hall of Fame coach Clarence Gaines) before embarking on a career that has made him one of the most recognized and hard-working commentators in sports. He is the co-host of ESPNs First Take, hosts weekly NBA pre-game editions of SportsCenter with Stephen A. Smith, and is the host and executive producer of the daily original program Stephen As World on ESPN+.
In 2019, Smith was named the ambassador of HBCU Week by the City of Wilmington, Del., and was instrumental in bringing First Take to the 76ers Fieldhouse as part of the week-long celebration of HBCUs. First Take recorded its largest in-person audience ever, which led to a college fair that offered on-the-spot acceptance and more for prospective students.In 2019 and 2020, Stephen A. Smiths participation has enabled the HBCU Week foundation to generate 2,003 on-the-spot acceptances to attend HBCUs, and 11.2 million dollars in awarded scholarships.
The Undefeated on ESPN+
The launch of The Undefeated on ESPN+ enhances ESPN and Disneys ongoing commitment to telling Black Stories and establishes a year-round collaboration between the two brands that creates and curates content that is Powered by The Undefeated including a mixture of premium storytelling, relevant collections from The Undefeated and ESPN+ libraries and additional special projects. It will serve as a home throughout the year that tells Black stories, elevates Black voices in sports, highlights specific communities within sports (e.g. less-known Black sports trailblazers, Black female athletes, etc.), and explores the off-field/off-court work of athletes within their communities.
The Undefeated has a long-established commitment to telling the stories of HBCUs, as one of the core content verticals onwww.TheUndefeated.com. Since its launch in May 2016, The Undefeated has been a leading platform for the comprehensive coverage of HBCU sports, campus life and culture, general news, personality profiles and conversations with newsmakers. Highlights include: convening the first forum at an HBCU with a U.S. President in October 2016 aconversationwith President Barack Obama at North Carolina A&T State University; launching the annual ESPN/The Undefeated HBCUBand Rankingsin 2018; Makur Makers first-person account in July 2020 about becoming the first blue-chip basketball recruit to play at an HBCU (Howard University) since 1980; the all-day celebration of the HBCU class of 2020 during #UndefeatedHBCUDay on May 23; and more.
Beyond storytelling, The Undefeated annually recruits and trains six emerging journalists from HBCUs for the Rhoden Fellowship, a one-year, fully paid sports journalism internship program where the fellows serve as correspondents covering their respective schools and surrounding communities for the platform.
Other critically-acclaimed content in The Undefeated on ESPN+ includes a collection of nearly 70 hours of stories including the recently-released Tiger Woods: Americas Son, and thematic collections focused on Black excellence, courage, community, passion, perseverance, reexamination, unity, classic events and more. Curated content comes from the unmatched ESPN library of storytelling, including The Undefeated Presents, ESPN Films and 30 For 30, E:60, SportsCenter and SC Featured, Nine for IX, College Football 150 and classic performances from Wimbledon, The Masters, US Open, the Top Rank and ESPN Big Fights library.
The Undefeated is the premier platform for exploring the intersections of race, sports and culture. It enlightens and entertains with innovative storytelling, original reporting and provocative commentary. The digital hub, TheUndefeated.com, which launched in May 2016, combines innovative long-form and short-form storytelling, investigation, original reporting, and provocative commentary to enlighten and entertain African Americans, as well as sports fans seeking a deeper understanding of black athletes, culture and related issues.
In addition to its cutting-edge content, The Undefeated seeks to be a thought-leader on race, sports and culture in the country convening insightful forums to discuss and debate topical issues affecting sports and race in America.
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Media Contacts
ESPN / ESPN+:Kevin Ota [emailprotected]Jay Jay Nesheim [emailprotected]Isabelle Lopez [emailprotected]
The Undefeated:Mac Nwulu [emailprotected]Kimberly Jarvis [emailprotected]
Chris Paul:Amy Jacobs [emailprotected]Alexis Reynolds [emailprotected]
About Ohh Dip!!! ProductionsFounded by NBA All-Star Chris Paul, Ohh Dip!!! is focused on developing a wide range of projects across the spectrum of sports and entertainment for all platforms, including unscripted, scripted, digital, premium, documentaries, short-form content and more. Ohh Dip!!! is passionate about storytelling and bringing audiences together through entertaining, inspiring and unique programming.
Ohh Dip!!! Productions previously collaborated with ESPN Films on Pauls three-part docuseriesChris Pauls Chapter 3, which chronicles his offseason move to the Houston Rockets in 2017, and the 2018 filmCrossroads, which was produced by Roadside Entertainment and follows a group of Black American boys in North Carolina who discover a love for lacrosse and their teams journey in overcoming adversity.
Additional projects include The Game Changers, an award-winning 2018 documentary about plant-based eating, and Quibis 2020 Blackballed, the inside story of Donald Sterling and the L.A. Clippers. Upcoming projects include The Day Sports Stood Still, a documentary from director Antoine Fuqua and Imagine Documentaries about sports shutting down due to Covid-19 for HBO and to stream on HBO Max, and American Sole, executive produced alongside Kevin Hart, which follows two characters played by Pete Davidson and OShea Jackson Jr. in the sneaker reselling industry.
About Roadside EntertainmentFounded in 2004 by Emmy Award-winning producer/directors John Hirsch and Ron Yassen, Roadside Entertainment has a simple goal: Find great stories and bring them to life, seeking out characters who through force of will or the dynamics of circumstance rise up and inspire us in extraordinary ways. As filmmakers, Hirsch and Yassen take nothing for granted and strive to bring creative storytelling, honesty and integrity to everything they do. Hirsch co-produces the ESPY Awards on ABC and is an Executive Producer and Showrunner on Marvels Hero Project, on Disney+. Yassens credits include more than 30 documentary films, including Roger Maris: Reluctant Hero, Glory in Black and White, Kareem: Minority of One, and 50 Cent: Origin of Me. In addition to the ESPYs, Roadside previously collaborated with ESPN on the Emmy-nominated documentaryCrossroads, which premiered at the Tribeca film festival in 2018
Chris Paul, Ohh Dip!!! Productions and Roadside Entertainment are represented by CAA.
About Mr. SAS Inc.Mr. SAS Inc. was founded by Stephen A. Smith. Mr. SAS Inc is focused on developing game shows, talk shows, sitcoms, unscripted, scripted movies, and documentaries. Mr. SAS Inc. produces shows like ESPN+s Stephen As World. A show that resonates with strong storytelling, celebrity guests, and original content to bring audiences entertaining, inspiring, and unique programming. Mr. SAS Inc. is co-producing HBCU=Black Excellence, a multi-part series using archival footage, photographs, news clips, and interviews about the most significant figures in the history of HBCUs. From Athletes to Historians, Celebrities to Politicians, Entertainers, and other prominent influencers, theyll all come together to tell the true HBCU story. HBCUs significant impact on American Society and Culture, and how its relevance continues to grow today.
About North Carolina Central UniversityNorth Carolina Central University (NCCU) prepares students to succeed in the global marketplace. Consistently ranked as a top Historically Black College or University, NCCU offers flagship programs in the sciences, education, law,business, nursing and the arts. Founded in 1910 and located in the Research Triangle Region,NCCU remains committed to diversityin and accesstohigher education. The university, which offers bachelors degrees in more than 100 disciplines, masters degrees in more than 40 areas, and a Ph.D. in Integrated Biosciences, has an expanding academic portfolio that meets current and future workforce demands in industries from clinical research to information technology. NCCUs signature graduate and undergraduate degrees are housed in seven colleges and schools. NCCU is a leader in the scientific study of health disparities and provides students with the opportunity to gain laboratory skills and experience working with faculty researchers and pharmaceutical and biotechnology industry professionals in two, state-of-the-art research institutes that are housed on campus.
About ESPN+ESPN+ is the industry-leading sports streaming service that offers fans in the U.S. thousands of live sports events, original programming not available on ESPNs linear TV or digital networks and exclusive editorial content from dozens of ESPN writers and reporters. Launched in April 2018, ESPN+ has grown to more than 11.5 million subscribers.
Fans sign up to ESPN+ for just $5.99 a month (or $59.99 per year) at ESPN.com, ESPNplus.com or on the ESPN App (mobile and connected devices). It is also available as part of The Disney Bundle offer that gives subscribers access to Disney+, ESPN+ and Hulu (ad-supported) all for just $12.99/month.
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Why Not Us: North Carolina Central University Men's Basketball, from Executive Producers Chris Paul & Stephen A. Smith, to Debut as Part of New...
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Navigating the Maze of Paying for College – The New York Times
Posted: at 7:32 pm
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Ron Liebers new book, The Price You Pay for College, aims at helping families with, as the books subtitle puts it, the biggest financial decision they will ever make. Lieber, a personal finance columnist for The Times, visits the podcast this week to discuss it. Among other subjects, he addresses all the ways in which the price to attend a particular college can vary from student to student, similar to how the cost of seats on one airplane flight can vary.
It can be different for everyone, Lieber says. If you ask a bunch of students in Bio 101 what they paid, theres a pretty good chance that youll find in a class of 100 50, 60, 70 different answers; and then a whole bunch of people who just paid the full price. On the airline, theres probably slightly fewer prices in the airplane cabin, but its not that far apart. The difference here the problem, the challenge, the extremely frustrating thing about college is that you do not know what the price will be until after you run the gantlet and get your offer of admission.
Michael J. Stephen visits the podcast to discuss his new book, Breath Taking: The Power, Fragility, and Future of Our Extraordinary Lungs. Stephen, a pulmonary expert at Thomas Jefferson University, talks about what weve learned about the lungs during the coronavirus crisis, and more generally about the wonders and perplexities of this organ.
Our lungs are the last organ to kick in as babies, Stephen says. When were in utero, the lungs are completely not functioning; Mom is giving us all of our oxygen needs. And at birth, they spring open and spring to life.
Also on this weeks episode, Alexandra Alter has news from the publishing world; and The Timess critics talk about books theyve recently reviewed. Pamela Paul is the host.
Here are the books discussed by the critics this week:
We would love to hear your thoughts about this episode, and about the Book Reviews podcast in general. You can send them to books@nytimes.com.
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Navigating the Maze of Paying for College - The New York Times
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Amid political riots, we need to learn from other points of view -opinion – The Jerusalem Post
Posted: at 7:31 pm
Its politically incorrect but true: Ehud Olmert is responsible for the haredi riots, and the radical Squad is responsible for the Capitol Hill invasion, just as Donald Trump was responsible for the Black Lives Matter riots.
Admittedly, the word partially should sit in front of the word responsible. But when historians assess our era, they will cross such wires insightfully. As dot-connectors deputized to reject partisan groupthink, they will link verbal violence with mob violence, spreading blame broadly. It makes sense. Shouldnt they and we hold those responsible for irresponsible rhetoric at least partially responsible?
Morally and legally, fouling the atmosphere isnt as bad as committing foul crimes. And false equivalences are no better than partisan blinders. But the historical docket is less forgiving than courts of law: quicker to convict, while sentencing only to eternal damnation, not actual incarceration.
There should be a self-imposed moratorium on trash-talking most people when they first die. We used to call it decency or menschlichkeit. Why upset this admittedly controversial but generous mans family?
To make the point crassly, its fair to snipe that Olmerts self-righteousness might be easier to take if he hadnt spent 16 months in the slammer. Today, he can defend himself. I would not make that jab upon his death, because it might hurt his family to read those words at that sensitive time.
Similarly, in the US, its obviously easier to see how overheated left-wing rhetoric fueled the summer riots that killed more than 26 and destroyed thousands of businesses, while blaming right-wing Trumpian hooligans for the Capitol invasion. Crossing wires emphasizes the wider problem, diffusing guilt widely despite many peoples certitude that their side is blameless and their opponents are evil.
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IN 1895, the French intellectual Gustave Le Bon published The Crowd: A Study of the Popular Mind. Le Bon identified three keys to mob psychology: anonymity, contagion and suggestibility. Those elements he teased out 125 years ago to describe rioting masses explain todays virtual mass Internet bullying, too.
I know perfectly nice people who post perfectly awful posts online emboldened by anonymity, joining the pile-on, validated by everyone elses harshness. Note how many of Trumps Capitol Hill hooligans reject masks to fight coronavirus but hid behind masks to assail democracy.
Recently, I wrote a controversial article endorsing Trumps Senate conviction but suggesting Joe Biden pardon him as a healing gesture. The abuse I received was predictable and personal. When I responded to some attackers respectfully but unapologetically most continued to disagree but de-escalated. Sorry, I was perhaps caught in the moment, one wrote.
This is why Le Bon taught: The power of crowds is only to destroy.
The masses have never thirsted after truth, he warned. Whoever can supply them with illusions is easily their master....
In crowds, it is stupidity and not mother wit that is accumulated, he realized. Why? Because a crowd thinks in images, making it intolerant because the shorthand of images forces everyone to deal in absolutes. After all, The stronger the belief, the greater its intolerance. Men dominated by a certitude cannot tolerate those who do not accept it.
Le Bon expected scholars to destroy chimeras partisan illusions, certitudes and monsters while politicians make use of them, proving that fanatics and the hallucinated create history.
Alas, our politics, our media, our social media, even todays hyper-politicized professors, favor the fanatics and the hallucinated, those mobilized by simplistic images and cemented in certitude. They are nevertheless the shrill minority. We, the silenced majority, are too passive: wringing our hands, furrowing our brows, letting the bullies reign.
WE MUST mobilize. Just as so many of us take responsibility for the environment by reducing our carbon footprints recycling, going green, reusing shopping bags believing our little household can make a difference in a world of big polluters, try reducing your partisan toxic carbon footprint. Every reduction helps.
First, avoid simplicity, seek complexity. When politics seems so black-and-white, when you cant conceive of anything good about their leader or anything bad about yours, check your arrogance. Most political positions are compromises, hedges; if its all black-and-white without any gray think self-critically.
Second, resist joining the cancel culture against rivals while creating a call-out culture among your allies. Confront your sides bullies. Spend more time policing your own than others, not to enforce unanimity but to acknowledge complexity and cultivate decency.
And third, find people in your community who voted the wrong way, then dont just talk to them but listen to them, generously. Try understanding their perspective, bringing humble pie to the conversation, not the usual red meat. A little humility, a little less certitude, goes far.
Ultimately: individuals resist crowds; the idiosyncratic counters fanatics, and mature democrats see the realists three-dimensional mosaic, not the hallucinators one-dimensional blueprint.
My father, Bernard Dov Troy, raised us on pitgamim, lovely Jewish aphorisms. He particularly loves: Who are wise? Those who learn from everyone! Too many today learn only from those who agree with them. Lets master this rabbinic teaching to improve politics, culture, society, democracy, while saving our souls and improving our moods.
The writer is a distinguished scholar of North American history at McGill University and the author of nine books on American history and three on Zionism. His book Never Alone: Prison, Politics and My People, coauthored with Natan Sharansky, was just published by PublicAffairs of Hachette.
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Amid political riots, we need to learn from other points of view -opinion - The Jerusalem Post
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