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Alabama s Capitol riot suspects: Where their cases stand
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За 65 лет до TikTok: как советские дети восставали против портретов Сталина
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Veteran Lonnie Coffman Took Cache of Firepower to D.C. Ahead of Riot, Prosecutors Say
On 1/17/21 at 6:51 AM EST
A retired veteran who was arrested during the riots at the U.S. Capitol earlier this month will be held without bond after being indicted on 17 different charges.
Seventy-year-old Lonnie Coffman, from Alabama, was arrested by federal authorities in Washington, D.C. on January 6, shortly after rioters stormed the Capitol buildng.
The rioters, many of whom wore President Donald Trump paraphernalia, temporarily halted the tallying of Electoral College votes to ratify President-elect Joe Biden s as the winner of the November 3 presidential election.
Joshua Black, Alabama man seen breaching Capitol, said he was led by ‘spirit of God’
Updated Jan 28, 2021;
Federal court documents made public Thursday said 44-year-old Joshua Matthew Black of Leeds was among the crowd that forced its way into the building while the joint session of Congress was underway to certify the vote count of the Electoral College in the 2020 presidential election.
Several of the protesters then made their way into the Senate chambers, video of which was captured on multiple cell phones.
One of those men, according to a federal criminal complaint, was Black. He is charged with entering a restricted building or grounds; violent entry and disorderly conduct.
Lonnie Coffman, Alabama man caught with Molotov cocktails in DC, planned to give out weapons, feds say
Updated Jan 12, 2021;
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An Alabama man arrested with nearly a dozen Molotov cocktails as well as guns and ammo has a “concerning history and characteristics” that raise a grave risk that he would endanger the community should he be released from custody, according to federal court documents made public Tuesday.
A search of his pickup truck turned up 11 Molotov cocktail explosive devices, and multiple other items including a letter in which he named U.S. Rep. André Carson of Indiana, who labeled a “Muslim,” and also named a judge with words “bad guy” beside the judge’s name.
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