Jan. 6 Rioter Came To D.C. With Arsenal, Brought Pistol Onto Capitol Grounds
Newly unsealed court records underscore what Donald Trump has denied about the riot at the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021: that some participants were armed.
A court filing unsealed by federal prosecutors details how a Texas man and his friends brought an arsenal of guns with them to Washington, D.C., and how he snuck one onto the Capitol grounds during the deadly Jan. 6, 2021 insurrection attempt.
Roger Preacher was first charged in May of last year with unlawful possession of a firearm on the Capitol grounds on the day of the insurrection. He carried a .22 caliber Walther P22 pistol in his waistband on the Capitol’s lower west terrace, where some of the worst violence of the day erupted.
Preacher was arraigned in May and pleaded guilty, but his case was put under seal. U.S. attorneys told a judge there was “sensitive information” specific to Preacher’s plea agreement that couldn’t be released publicly at the time. With those concerns apparently resolved, prosecutors unsealed the case last week.
The newly released
records offer disturbing details about Preacher’s foray to Washington, where he attended the “Stop the Steal” rally that would end in the storming of Congress and an attempt to overturn the election.
According to prosecutors, Preacher drove from
Texas to Virginia with two other men, Jason Parsons and Mario Mares. They started texting about their plans around Jan. 2, and on the journey discussed “firearms laws in the District of Columbia and ... knew it would be unlawful to bring firearms into the city,” the records allege.
Prosecutors said the three men drove from Texas to a Virginia suburb of D.C. in Mares’ car, which they’d loaded with a bag of guns, and they checked into a hotel to prepare for the rally on Jan. 6. The next day, Preacher drove himself and his friends from Virginia into D.C., and though the men left their rifles behind in the car, Preacher tucked the .22 caliber into a holster on his waist. Prosecutors say the men made it to the lower west terrace of the Capitol grounds, and Preacher was in that location for an hour before getting separated from his group.
Back at their hotel room in Virginia, the three men discussed hearing about arrests and decided to flee back to Texas. But before they headed home, they took a picture of their guns and tactical gear and posted it to
Facebook.
“**** Washington DC,” the caption read.