US Federal prosecutors have said that rioters who seized the Capitol last week had an intention of "capturing and assassinating elected officials."
In a new
court filing which includes a memo seeking to keep Jacob Anthony Chansley who
rallied people inside the Capitol using a bullhorn in detention, it was
gathered that he left a note for Vice President Mike Pence warning that “it’s
only a matter of time, justice is coming”.
The filing
added;
“Strong
evidence, including Chansley’s own words and actions at the Capitol, supports
that the intent of the Capitol rioters was to capture and assassinate elected
officials in the United States government."
The
disclosure which was made by the Justice Department lawyers in Arizona, as
security agencies continue digging deep to uncover what happened.
Prosecutors
and federal agents have begun bringing more serious charges tied to violence at
the Capitol, including against a retired fire fighter, Robert Sanford, that he
hurled a fire extinguisher at the head of one police officer and another, Peter
Stager, accused of beating a different officer with a pole bearing an American
flag.
In Chansley’s
case, prosecutors said the charges “involve active participation in an
insurrection attempting to violently overthrow the United States government”,
and warned that “the insurrection is still in progress” as law enforcement
prepares for more demonstrations in Washington and state capitals.
Asides
alleging that Chansley suffered from drug abuse, mental illness and poses a
serious flight risk, the prosecutors further stated that he "has spoken
openly about his belief that he is an alien, a higher being, and he is here on
Earth to ascend to another reality.” He is due in federal court in Arizona on
Friday January 15, for a detention hearing.
In a separate
case, prosecutors in Texas court alleged that a retired Air Force reservist who
carried plastic zip tie-like restraints on the Senate floor may have intended
to restrain lawmakers.
The justice
department has brought more than 80 criminal cases in connection with the
violent riots at the US Capitol last week, in which Trump’s supporters stormed
the building, ransacked offices, and in some cases attacked police.
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