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Capitol Hill bomb menace defendant Floyd Ray Roseberry in courtroom

A man named Floyd Ray Roseberry, who claims to be in his truck with explosives, speaks during a Facebook livestream in a still from a video that was captured in Washington on August 19, 2021.

Social media | via Reuters

The North Carolina man, who announced he had a bomb in his truck parked on Capitol Hill, was charged Friday on threats with the use of a weapon of mass destruction and attempted use of an explosive device.

The man, Floyd Ray Roseberry, was arrested without bail pending a medical examination of the defendant at a hearing in the US District Court in Washington, DC.

Judge Zia Faruqui ordered the assessment after Roseberry said it was difficult to understand the trial as he had been denied blood pressure medication and “my mental medicine” since he was handed over to police on Thursday.

“My memory is not that good, sir,” said Roseberry via audio link during the remote performance.

“We don’t need to be eye to eye,” Roseberry said at one point, referring to the lack of physical presence or video. “I can tell by your voice that you are a good man … I am ready to do whatever is asked.”

Roseberry, who said he was 51 years old despite authorities said he was 49, was appointed federal defender by Faruqui.

He’s next on trial on Wednesday. Roseberry faces the highest possible life imprisonment if convicted of weapons of mass destruction.

Prosecutors said they would ask Faruqui to hold him pending trial without bail.

Roseberry’s threat resulted in the evacuation of buildings including the Supreme Court, the Library of Congress, the Cannon House office building and the offices of the Republican National Committee.

Roseberry parked a pickup truck on a sidewalk in front of the library Thursday morning.

He then told police officers that he had a bomb inside, which set off an hour-long stalemate that resulted in him surrendering peacefully.

Floyd Ray Roseberry sits in his pickup truck in a standoff with the Capitol Police outside the Library of Congress in Washington DC on August 19, 2021

Photo: Sydney Bobb

Before giving up, the Grover, North Carolina man posted videos of his truck on Facebook speaking directly to President Joe Biden, whose resignation he called for when he called for a revolution.

He also called for US air strikes on the Taliban in Afghanistan.

Roseberry claimed in a video that he had a barrel of gunpowder and more than two pounds of the explosive tannerite in the truck. He also suggested that there were four more bombs in the DC area.

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Capitol Hill bomb risk: Floyd Ray Roseberry surrenders

A North Carolina man surrendered Thursday afternoon to police, hours after telling them he had a bomb in his truck parked outside the Library of Congress on Capitol Hill.

That threat by the suspect, Floyd Ray Roseberry, led to the evacuation of the library, the Supreme Court, the Cannon House Office Building and the offices of the Republican National Committee.

It also sparked a massive police response to an area that seven months earlier saw the Capitol complex violently invaded by supporters of then-President Donald Trump.

“He got out of the vehicle and surrendered, and the tactical units that were close by took him into custody without incident,” U.S. Capitol Police Chief Tom Manger said of the 49-year-old Roseberry.

“He gave up and did not resist,” Manger said. “As far as we could tell it was just his decision to surrender at that point.”

A man named Floyd Ray Roseberry who claims to be sitting in his truck with explosives speaks during a Facebook livestream in a still image from video taken in Washington, U.S. August 19, 2021.

Social Media | via Reuters

Manger said there was a propane gas container in his black pickup truck.

But, the chief added, “At this point we think that’s safe.”

Manger also said, “Right now we have no indication that he was acting with anyone else, but that is part of the ongoing investigation.”

A bomb was not found after a search of Roseberry’s vehicle but possible bomb making materials were secured from his truck, according to a statement from U.S. Capitol Police.

Roseberry, who most recently lived in Grover, North Carolina, posted several videos on Facebook from his truck in the hours before he surrendered, directly addressed remarks to President Joe Biden, whose resignation he demanded. He also called for U.S. airstrikes on the Taliban in Afghanistan.

Roseberry claimed on the video that he had a 7-pound keg of gunpowder and 2.5 pounds of the explosive tannerite in the truck, and suggested there were four other bombs in the D.C. area.

He also said his wife has cancer and that health insurance would not cover some treatment for her.

“I promised my wife I’d be home Sunday, whichever home it is. I’ve cleared my conscience with God,” Roseberry said.

The White House received updates from law enforcement during the standoff.

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Facebook removed Roseberry’s videos and his page after reporters found the messages.

Manger said that Roseberry has had some losses of family, including his mother, who “recently passed away.”

“There were other issues that he was dealing with,” the chief said.

Manger said the Capitol Police would work with the office of the U.S. attorney for the District of Columbia to determine what criminal charges Roseberry will face.

The chief said that Roseberry has a criminal record in North Carolina, but nothing that appeared “serious.”

Manger earlier had told reporters that Roseberry drove his truck onto the sidewalk in front of the Library of Congress at about 9:15 a.m.

A pickup truck is parked on the sidewalk in front of the Library of Congress’ Thomas Jefferson Building, as seen from a window of the U.S. Capitol, Thursday, Aug. 19, 2021, in Washington.

Alex Brandon | AP

When Capitol Police responded to a call about the truck, “The driver of the truck told the responding officer on the scene that he had a bomb and what appeared, the officer said, appeared to be a detonator in the man’s hand,” Manger said.

“So we immediately evacuated the nearby buildings,” Manger said.

Congress and the Supreme Court are not currently in session, which reduced the number of people who normally would be working around the Capitol Hill complex.

Subways were bypassing the Capitol South station because of the incident, the Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority said.

People are evacuated from the James Madison Memorial Building, a Library of Congress building, in Washington on Thursday, Aug. 19, 2021, as law enforcement investigate a report of a pickup truck containing an explosive device near the U.S. Capitol.

Alex Brandon | AP

The area quickly was swarming with officers from a slew of law enforcement agencies: Capitol Police, FBI, the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, and Washington, D.C., police.

Police negotiators began communicating with Roseberry, and sharpshooters took up positions in the area surrounding the truck.

A police sniper team remains in position near the Library of Congress on Capitol Hill August 19, 2021 in Washington, DC.

Win McNamee | Getty Images

Sydney Bobb, a student at the University of Wisconsin in Madison, told CNBC that she had been walking to a class at the United Methodist Building on Capitol Hill when she saw Roseberry in his truck outside the Library of Congress.

“I look up and see a guy throwing [$1 bills] out of his truck,” said Bobb, who snapped a photo of the bizarre scene, which she posted on Twitter.

“I heard him say, like, he had a bomb on him.”

During the standoff, Roseberry communicated with authorities by writing on a dry-erase board that he had in the vehicle.

He refused to use a telephone that was sent to him with a police robot, according to Manger.

One of the explosives Roseberry claimed on his videos to have, tannerite, is popular in target shooting.

Tannerite is a binary explosive. Each part separately is not an explosive element, but when combined they are combustible.

Overuse of tannerite has been responsible for several gender reveal parties gone wrong in recent years, and was also popularized by the Netflix show “Tiger King.”

— Additional reporting by CNBC’s Amanda Macias, Bradley Howard and Brian Schwartz.

Correction: Sydney Bobb is a female student at the University of Wisconsin in Madison. An earlier version misstated her gender.

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After DC bomb scare, Rep. Mo Brooks sympathetic for ‘citizenry anger’

In this file photo dated January 6, 2021, Rep. Mo Brooks, R-Ark., Speaks in Washington at a rally in support of President Donald Trump known as the “Save America Rally”.

Jacquelyn Martin | AP

Republican MP Mo Brooks responded Thursday to a bomb threat that forced the evacuation of numerous buildings on Capitol Hill by saying he understood “civil anger against dictatorial socialism”.

The statement quickly drew heavy criticism of Brooks, who voted to overturn President Joe Biden’s election and is facing a lawsuit from California Democratic MP Eric Swalwell accusing him of contributing to the deadly invasion of the Capitol on January 6 to have.

“Tell us you’re on the terrorist’s side without telling us you’re on the terrorist’s side,” Swalwell wrote on Twitter in response to Brooks’ testimony.

Rep. Adam Kinzinger, a Republican from Illinois, described Brooks’ testimony in a Twitter post as “nasty”. Kinzinger was one of the few Republicans who voted for the impeachment of former President Donald Trump for invading the Capitol.

49-year-old Floyd Ray Roseberry, the alleged bomb threat, surrendered and was taken into custody by police outside the Library of Congress after an hour-long standoff where he claimed to have explosives in his truck.

In social media videos posted on Facebook, Roseberry repeatedly referred to a “revolution” and asked Biden to send someone to speak to him.

Brooks said in his statement that “although the motivations of this terrorist are not yet publicly known … in general I understand the anger of citizens directed at dictatorial socialism and its threats to liberty, liberty and the fabric of American society . “

He added that the way to stop socialism is to have “patriotic Americans” fight back in the coming election cycles.

“I strongly encourage patriotic Americans to do just that, more than ever. Frankly, America’s future is in jeopardy,” said Brooks.

Brooks, a member of the Alabama House of Representatives who has been running for the Senate since 2011, had negotiated with Trump in late 2020 about ways to overturn Biden’s election victory in the electoral college.

On January 6, when Congress was due to meet in the Capitol to confirm Biden’s victory, Brooks spoke nearby at a Trump-organized rally calling on Republicans to reject the election results.

At the “Stop the Steal” rally, Brooks urged a crowd of Trump supporters to “start by name and kick the ass”. Trump, in his own speech, urged the crowd to march to the Capitol: “If you don’t fight like hell, you will have no more land,” he said.

Shortly after Congress convened to confirm Biden’s victory, a mob of Trump supporters stormed the Capitol, derailed the process and forced lawmakers to flee their chambers and go into hiding. Since then, more than 500 arrests have been made in connection with the Capitol Rebellion.

In March, Swalwell filed a civil lawsuit against Brooks and Trump, as well as Donald Trump Jr. and former Trump attorney Rudy Giuliani, accusing them of “being wholly responsible for the injuries and destruction caused by the mob.”

Brooks has asked a judge to dismiss him as a defendant on the lawsuit, partially saying that his speech at the January 6 rally was given as part of his membership in Congress.

Thursday’s bomb threat forced the evacuation of the Library of Congress as well as the Supreme Court, the Cannon House office building and the offices of the Republican National Committee. Congress was on hiatus so there were fewer people on the hill.

Police negotiators began communicating with Roseberry, and snipers took up positions around the truck. He finally got out of his pickup truck, which was parked on the sidewalk in front of the government building, and surrendered without resistance, police said.

US Capitol Police chief Tom Manger said Roseberry appeared to have been grappling with the recent loss of family members as well as “other issues he has faced.”

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Man accused of bomb plot in opposition to Democrats abused steroids, proclaimed ‘REVOLUTION’

Two California men have been indicted for allegedly plotting to attack the Democratic Party headquarters in Sacramento with explosive devices following last year’s presidential election. 

The men were charged Thursday in a San Francisco federal court with conspiracy to destroy a building affecting interstate commerce and other related crimes, in a scheme to attack the John L. Burton Democratic Headquarters in Sacramento. 

Ian Rogers, 45, of Napa, and Jarrod Copeland, 37, of Vallejo, began plotting a series of “specific, detailed, and serious” plans to attack Democrats with incendiary devices after the 2020 presidential election, according to court documents. The men also attempted to gain support from militia groups in hopes that their attack would spark a movement to overthrow the government. 

The charges come as authorities are on heightened alert for potential political violence following the Jan. 6 invasion of Capitol Hill by supporters of then-President Donald Trump who sought to block the certification of Joe Biden’s victory in the presidential election.

“Do you think something is wrong with me how I’m excited to attack the democrats?” Rogers asked Copeland on a messaging app last December.

Copeland, who was arrested Wednesday, later told police that he didn’t take Rogers’ statement seriously and was only listening to him “blow off steam.”

But court records indicate that Copeland encouraged Rogers’ discussions about violence with messages stating that they would take action to keep Trump in office. 

“If we see [Trump] can’t win we strike,” Copeland said in one message. “If they don’t listen to trump they will hear us.” 

Copeland also contacted the Proud Boys and Three Percenters, two extreme anti-government militia groups, and attempted to recruit individuals to join their plot in late December, authorities said. 

Court records state that Copeland had joined the military in 2013 but was arrested for desertion twice and was discharged in 2016 in lieu of court martial. He then joined the Three Percenters and later became an officer within the militia group, court records say.

The two men continued discussions of violent attacks on Democrats after election results were certified on Jan. 6, according to the charges. Prosecutors alleged that the insurrection at the Capitol had inspired them, citing Copeland’s excited messages on that day that fantasized about violence. 

“REVOLUTION,” “REVOLUTION,” “REVOLUTION,” Copeland said about the insurrection. “I’m f—— juiced!!!!!”

“Damnit I wanna roll into sac geared up,” another message of his said, referring to Sacramento and his military-style tactical gear and weapons. 

The Democratic headquarters in Sacramento was selected as their first target to attack with explosive devices, and the two men had discussed attacking the Twitter and Facebook headquarters next, prosecutors charged. 

“Heads must be taken,” Copeland said. “I don’t like to think it but I think we will have to die for what we believe in.”

Rogers was arrested on Jan. 15 accused of possessing five pipe bombs and remains in state custody in Napa County on multiple weapons charges. In addition to the pipe bombs, authorities seized nearly 50 firearms and about 15,000 rounds of ammunition from his home and business, according to a criminal complaint. 

Materials used to make destructive devices were also found at his business, including black powder, pipes and end caps and several manuals, such as “The Anarchist Cookbook,” the “U.S. Army Improvised Munitions Handbook” and “Homemade C-4: A Recipe for Survival,” the complaint said. 

Authorities also reported discovering a sticker on Rogers’ vehicle window that is commonly used by Three Percenters. 

A day after Rogers’ arrest, Copeland purged all past communications with Rogers in fear of being traced. 

Court records also allege Copeland abuses anabolic steroids, noting a $1,200 purchase of steroids in December and the seizure of steroids from his home in January.

“The danger he poses to anyone with opposing political views is obvious,” the court records said. 

If convicted, the two men could face a maximum sentence of 20 years in prison, a three-year term of supervised release and a $250,000 fine for the conspiracy charge, according to the Department of Justice.

Rogers also faces a maximum of 10 years in prison for his additional weapons charge, and Copeland faces a maximum of 20 years in prison for his destruction of evidence charge. 

Rogers’ attorney declined CNBC’s request for comment, and Copeland’s attorney could not be reached for comment. 

“Firebombing your perceived political opponents is illegal and does not nurture the sort of open and vigorous debate that created and supports our constitutional democracy,” said U.S. Attorney Stephanie M. Hinds. “The allegations in the indictment describe despicable conduct. Investigation and prosecution of those who choose violence over discussion is as important as anything else we do to protect our free society.”

Rusty Hicks, chair of the California Democratic Party, called their alleged plot “extremely disturbing.”

“We are relieved to know the plot was unsuccessful, the individuals believed to be responsible are in custody, and our staff and volunteers are safe and sound,” Hicks said in a statement Thursday. “Yet, it points to a broader issue of violent extremism that is far too common in today’s political discourse.”

— CNBC’s Dan Mangan and Amanda Macias contributed to this report.

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Trump backer held on pipe bomb costs, mentioned attacking Twitter, Fb

Ian Benjamin Rogers

Source: Napa County Sheriff’s Office

A California man charged with possession of five pipe bombs spoke of targeting Democrats and social media giants Twitter and Facebook as part of a discussion of the “war” to ensure that former President Donald Trump would stays in the White House.

“I want to blow up a Democratic building that is that bad,” Napa County’s man Ian Benjamin Rogers wrote in a text message on a criminal complaint in the California Federal District Court. The complaint described a wide range of firearms, ammunition, bomb-making equipment and warfare manuals that were in his possession.

“The Democrats have to pay,” wrote Rogers, a married father of two who owns British Auto Repair from the Napa Valley.

In another text message, Rogers said he was “thinking of the first target of the Sac Office,” which an FBI agent suspects is the Sacramento office of California Governor Gavin Newsom.

“Then maybe bird and face offices,” wrote the 44-year-old according to the complaint.

“Sorry it came to that, but I’m not going down without a fight … These commies need to be told what’s going on.”

The agent said the text appears to refer to Twitter, whose logo is a blue bird, and Facebook “because both social media platforms blocked Trump’s accounts to prevent him from sending messages on those platforms,” ​​briefly After the January 6 uprising, the US Capitol was loved by a crowd of its supporters.

Rogers wrote in another text in which Trump was apparently the 45th president: “I hope 45 goes to war, if he doesn’t I will.”

Rogers admitted during an interview with FBI agents that “he built the pipe bombs but said they were for entertainment purposes only,” the complaint read.

However, the complaint states that these and other text messages indicated that Rogers mistakenly believed Trump won the 2020 presidential election and “his intention to attack Democrats and Democrat-affiliated venues to ensure Trump stays in office”.

“I continue to believe that the messages express Rogers’ intention to commit acts of violence locally in the absence of an organized ‘war’ to prevent Joe Biden from assuming the presidency,” the FBI agent wrote.

The agent noted that Rogers wrote in a January 10 text message, “We can attack Twitter or the Democrats you choose … I think we can either attack easily.”

When the person he texted suggested, “Let’s go after Soros” – well-known liberal investor George Soros – Rogers replied that Twitter or Democrats would be “easy” now while “Soros” had a “road trip” would require. “said the complaint.

Rogers, who is being held on $ 5 million federal gun charges, has yet to appear in federal court in San Francisco to be charged with unlawful possession of an unregistered destructive device.

Rogers’ attorney, Jess Raphael, said that a “disgruntled former employee” who had been fired by Rogers initiated the criminal investigation.

“The tipster had sent a handwritten document to the FBI in September that they were investigating and decided it was unrelated to terrorism and decided not to bring charges,” Raphael said in an email to CNBC.

“Apparently dissatisfied, the tipster sent a copy of his letter to the Napa sheriffs in October, who opened an investigation,” said the lawyer. “Nothing was done about it until January 15th after the Capitol Rebellion. I don’t know why they haven’t done anything for months.”

Raphael called Rodgers a “family man and a valued parishioner”. The lawyer also said, “I have 36 letters confirming his non-violence character.”

“He was a strong believer in President Trump and a gun collector,” said Raphael.

One person who answered the phone in Rogers’ workshop declined to comment, saying, “A lawyer advised us not to speak to reporters.”

The federal criminal complaint stated that the Napa County Sheriff’s Office, the FBI, and the Napa Special Investigations Bureau found a large gun safe in his shop containing several guns and the five during the January 15 raids on Rogers’ home and business Contained pipe bombs.

Pipe bombs as shown in an FBI criminal complaint

Source: FBI

Other items found in the safe were materials used to create destructive devices, including gunpowder, pipes and end caps.

Authorities also found manuals such as The Anarchist Cookbook, US Army Improvised Munitions Handbook, Homemade C-4: A Recipe for Survival, US Army Special Forces Guide to Unconventional Warfare, and the Guerrilla Warfare Handbook the Army.

A Nazi flag was also found in his safe, according to a prosecutor.

In total, the authorities confiscated 49 firearms from his home and business, including around two dozen ammunition boxes with thousands of rounds of ammunition.

One of the firearms is “an apparently kit-built MG-42 belt-drive machine gun that can fire fully automatically,” says the complaint.

The MG-42 during World War II was made in Germany and used by Nazi forces.

According to the criminal complaint, a sticker on a Rogers vehicle has a symbol for the anti-government group of three percent.

Rogers is not being charged in connection with the attack on the Capitol by the thousands of Trump supporters who made violent but botched efforts to get Congress to reject Joe Biden’s election as president. Five people died in connection with the riot, including a Capitol policeman who was beaten by people in the crowd.

The FBI continues to search for people who left two pipe bombs outside the national headquarters of the Republican and Democratic National Committees on the same day as this riot.

Raphael, Rogers’ attorney, said in his email that “the so-called tube bombs were little tubes filled with gunpowder to fill bullets that were capped, which is all normal hardware store.”

“They were detonated by the sheriffs in tires stacked outside Mr. Rogers’ auto repair shop,” said Raphael. “They didn’t even seem to damage the tires, as I saw in the newspaper photos. His entire weapon collection and the so-called pipe bombs were kept in a large, thick metal weapon safe.”

The attorney also said that even the tipster who briefed law enforcement on Rogers said he “told the sheriff’s investigators that Mr. Rogers was not a militia, hate group or extremist.”

Raphael also said he believed the Napa Sheriffs Department had apparently abused the bail process by filing a motion to significantly increase Rogers’ bond, alleging that he was likely to flee the jurisdiction.

“The entirety of their statement concerned weapons and language, none of which had anything to do with threatened escape,” said the lawyer.

A Twitter spokesman declined to comment.

Facebook did not have an immediate comment.