Proud Boys leader who burned BLM banner sentenced to 5 months

Edited by Ed Newman
2021-08-24 08:27:05

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Proud Boys leader Enrique Tarrio was sentenced Monday to five months in jail for burning a stolen Black Lives Matter banner and for bringing two high-capacity firearm magazines to Washington, DC, two days before the January 6 riot [File: Allison Dinner/AP Photo]

Washington, August 24 (RHC)-- The leader of the far-right Proud Boys group was sentenced to more than five months in jail on Monday for burning a Black Lives Matter banner that was torn down from a historic Black church in downtown Washington, DC and bringing two high-capacity firearm magazines into the nation’s capital days shortly before the January 6 riot.

Enrique Tarrio told the court he was “profusely” sorry for his actions, calling them a “grave mistake.”   “What I did was wrong,” Tarrio said during the hearing held via videoconference.

Tarrio was arrested as he arrived in Washington, DC, two days before thousands of supporters of then-President Donald Trump — including members of the Proud Boys — descended on the U.S. Capitol and disrupted the certification of the Electoral College vote. Tarrio was ordered to stay away from Washington, DC, and law enforcement later said Tarrio was picked up in part to help quell potential violence.

Authorities say Proud Boys members stole the banner that read BLACK LIVES MATTER from the Asbury United Methodist Church on December 12 and then set it ablaze using lighter fluid and lighters. Tarrio posted a picture of himself holding an unlit lighter to his Parler account and admitted days later in an interview with The Washington Post that he joined in the burning of the banner.

Reverend Ianther Mills, senior pastor of the church, told the judge it was an “act of intimidation and racism” that caused “immeasurable and possibly irreparable harm” on the community.

“His careless act of violence and hatred, targeted at a congregation of individuals with a lived history of social and racial injustice, had the presumably desired effect,” she said. “Asbury was forced to reckon with the very tangible evidence that we continue to live in a world where people radicalize hate based upon race and skin color.”

When police pulled Tarrio over on January 4 on the warrant for vandalizing the sign, officers found two unloaded magazines emblazoned with the Proud Boys logo in his bag.  Tarrio said, according to a police report, that he sells the clips and the ones he was carrying were purchased by a customer.

Tarrio pleaded guilty last month to destruction of property and attempted possession of a large-capacity ammunition feeding device.  A police spokesman told the Associated Press news agency in December that investigators were probing the events as potential hate crimes, but no hate crime charges were filed against Tarrio.

Proud Boys members describe themselves as a politically incorrect men’s club for “Western chauvinists.”  Its members frequently have engaged in street fights with antifascist activists at rallies and protests.

Authorities have narrowed in on the Proud Boys and other far-right groups, like the Oath Keepers, in their investigation into the January 6 attack on the Capitol that sent legislators running, injured dozens of law enforcement officers. Five people died in the events, including a Capitol police officer.

Nearly 600 people have been charged in the Capitol insurrection, but some of the most serious charges — involving accusations of planning to block the certification of the vote — have been filed against members of the groups.

About three dozen people charged have been identified by federal authorities as Proud Boys leaders, members or associates.  In one case, four group leaders have been charged with conspiring to impede the certification of President Joe Biden’s victory.  Tarrio hasn’t been charged in the Capitol attack.

It was recently revealed in court records that Tarrio had worked undercover and cooperated with investigators after being accused of fraud in 2012.  After Tarrio’s 2012 indictment for participating in a scheme involving the resale of diabetic test strips, he helped the government prosecute more than a dozen other people, the records show.



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