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Five people associated with Proud Boys arrested for Capitol riot on conspiracy charges

In a criminal complaint, an FBI agent described how the group “moved closely to each other” inside the Capitol on January 6 and wore pieces of fluorescent orange tape affixed to their clothing or gear.

Some are accused of leading crowds of rioters as they pushed through multiple police lines and made their way through the Capitol grounds. They all wore tactical-style gear, including helmets and gloves. One had a wooden club or ax handle that was initially disguised as a flag.

Authorities arrested the men and women in an early morning sweep Thursday. William Chrestman, Louis Enrique Colon and Christopher Kuehne were taken into custody near Kansas City, Missouri, and Cory and Felicia Konold, brother and sister, were arrested in Arizona, according to the Justice Department.

All but Chrestman are charged in a joint conspiracy filing — the greatest charge of organized activity by number to come out of the massive federal investigation — underscoring authorities’ focus on the Proud Boys, several of whom have already been charged in recent weeks. Chrestman is charged separately with conspiracy but grouped together with the others by an FBI agent in an affidavit.

The conspiracy charges are likely to grow. In a footnote in the affidavit, the FBI agent said they believe more people may be involved in the conspiracy and that an investigation is ongoing.

The Proud Boys, known for their aggressive men’s-rights philosophy and clashes with Antifa, have become a central target for prosecutors in Washington as they piece together the extent of coordinated activity at the Capitol. Some high-profile members of the group have been arrested over the past month and investigators have built out charges related to their fundraising efforts ahead of the insurrection.

On Wednesday, the group featured prominently in the Democratic impeachment managers’ case to convict former President Donald Trump.

Throughout their presentation in the Senate, the managers cited the role of noted Proud Boys in the violence and tried to connect them to Trump, who had refused to condemn them during the 2020 campaign.

The five people arrested Thursday are not described explicitly as members of the group, but their affiliations are laid out in detail.

In a video that authorities believe was posted to Felicia Konold’s Snapchat account, a female speaker celebrates that she had just been “recruited into a f***ing chapter from Kansas City” and shows off a challenge coin with apparent Proud Boys markings.

On January 6, the five are seen in a video marching toward the Capitol in a group that was led by two Proud Boys organizers, according to the complaint.

In another video from that day, Chrestman and Felicia Konold parade down Washington’s famed Constitution Avenue in a group with the two organizers shouting “Whose streets? Our streets,” the complaint says.

The FBI agent also notes that Kuehne carried rolls of the orange tape that was “strategically worn by each of the subjects as well as others in the crowd.”

“Based on my training and experience, your affiant believes the use of orange tape by multiple members in the crowd was a mark that was intended to identify persons for a particular purpose. The intent and purpose of this identifying tape remains under investigation,” the agent wrote.

Inside the building, surveillance video shows the group moving in close proximity and signaling “to coordinate their efforts.”

Four of the five are seen thwarting the descent of metal barriers that police had tried to lower in an attempt to seal off areas within the Capitol.

In pictures included in the court documents, Felicia Konold is seen holding one of the barriers up with her hand. Kuehne appeared to place a podium in the tracks of another barrier, the complaint says.

This story has been updated with additional reporting.

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Bruce Springsteen arrested at New Jersey national park on suspicion of drunken driving

Bruce Springsteen was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of alcohol at a national park in New Jersey last year, authorities said Wednesday.

Springsteen, nicknamed the Boss, was arrested Nov. 14 in Gateway National Recreation Area, also known as Sandy Hook, and charges included driving while intoxicated, reckless driving and consuming alcohol in a closed area, according to National Park Service spokeswoman Brenda Ling.

The arrest was first reported Wednesday by TMZ.

Ling said Springsteen, a well-known New Jersey native, was cooperative throughout the process.

Representatives for the rock legend did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

News of the arrest comes days after the debut of Springsteen’s first Super Bowl commercial. In the two-minute spot for Jeep, Springsteen says the country will again see unity and says “there’s hope on the road ahead.”

Fans have long praised Springsteen, 71, for his healthy lifestyle.

In his 2016 autobiography “Born to Run,” Springsteen said he avoided drugs and didn’t try alcohol until he was 22, partially because how he saw how drinking affected his father.

“He’s in good shape by not doing drugs. It’s something he doesn’t have to preach about. He’s a living example of what happens when you never do drugs your whole life,” Springsteen’s E Street Band guitarist Steven Van Zandt told Rolling Stone in 2012, speaking of Springsteen’s stamina on stage.

“I mean, I’m sure he’s taken a drink or two a few times in his life, but he was never a drinker either. And he eats right and he’s in the gym. Well, that’s what happens,” Van Zandt said. “Don’t do drugs. Don’t drink, eat right, go to the gym and you can rock & roll at 62, too.”



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‘Bullhorn Lady’ Rachel Marie Powell in Pennsylvania Arrested Over Capitol Riot

A Pennsylvania mother of eight on the run from authorities for her role in the Capitol riot has been arrested by the FBI, according to federal prosecutors.

Rachel Marie Powell of Sandy Lake, Pennsylvania, “is in custody,” Margaret Philbin, a spokesperson for the Pittsburgh U.S. Attorney’s Office, told The Daily Beast.

Powell, 40, was apprehended Thursday night in New Castle, according to Philbin. She could not immediately be reached for comment, and does not yet have a lawyer listed in court records.

The cheese and yogurt purveyor—dubbed “the bullhorn lady” after video emerged of Powell appearing to shout orders through a bullhorn during the Jan. 6 sacking of the Capitol—was apparently not home when the FBI raided her house Thursday afternoon. Neighbors told local news reporters that Powell and her family had lived there for several years but mostly kept to themselves.

According to a complaint filed Friday in federal court, Powell is facing charges of obstruction, depredation of government property, entering a restricted building with a dangerous weapon, and violent entry/disorderly conduct. She was scheduled to appear before a judge at 3 p.m.

The filing says Powell used a pipe to smash a window at the Capitol, causing more than $1,000 in damages. An anonymous tipster first outed Powell to the FBI, it explains, and gave agents the link to Powell’s Facebook profile. There, agents were able to match photos of Powell wearing a distinctive set of earmuffs with those she was seen wearing at the Capitol.

After being seen on video during the Jan. 6 riot in a pink hat and sunglasses, Powell gained her signature moniker, though she was also known as “Pink Hat Lady.”

“People should probably coordinate together if you’re going to take this building,” Powell shouted through a shattered window to a group of insurrectionists inside the Capitol. “We got another window to break to make in-and-out easy.”

Powell, who became the subject of her own FBI “Wanted” poster, agreed to an interview with Ronan Farrow of The New Yorker before she was charged.

Originally from Anaheim, California, Powell told Farrow that she acted spontaneously on Jan. 6, and was “not part of a plot.”

“I have no military background…. I’m a mom with eight kids,” she said. “That’s it. I work. And I garden. And raise chickens. And sell cheese at a farmers’ market…. Listen, if somebody doesn’t help and direct people, then do more people die? That’s all I’m going to say about that. I can’t say anymore. I need to talk to an attorney.”

Powell apparently became radicalized during the past year or so: When she wasn’t manning a table at local farmers’ markets, Powell used Facebook to post about topics such as yoga and organic food. However, she recently began expressing increasingly extreme political views that included various conspiracy theories about COVID-19 and unfounded doubts about the validity of the 2020 presidential election.

“It isn’t to [sic] late to wake up, say no, and restore freedoms,” she wrote on Facebook last May.

Powell was reportedly influenced by Infowars founder Alex Jones, who has claimed the Sandy Hook school shooting was a hoax, and former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani, who has made countless false claims while serving as Donald Trump’s personal attorney.

Deborah Lemons, Powell’s mother, told Farrow that Powell was held at gunpoint during a carjacking when she was a child. She said it “amazed” her that her daughter—with whom Lemons has had a strained relationship for the past several years—would participate in the Capitol riot having been on the wrong end of violence in the past.

“She well knows what it’s like to wonder if she’s gonna lose her life,” said Lemons.

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Six arrested after changing Hollywood sign to “HOLLYBOOB”

Six people were arrested Monday after scaling steep terrain around the iconic Hollywood sign and strategically changing it to convey what they said was a breast cancer awareness message, according to police.

“HOLLYBOOB,” the sign briefly read, with a big tarp with the letter “B” on it thrown over the “W” and a strategically placed white dash to make the “D” another “B.”

LAPD Capt. Steve Lurie, the Hollywood area commander, said LAPD security personnel observed the five men and one woman on video surveillance about 1:15 p.m. A police helicopter responded to the area, and flight crew were able to watch the group move back down the hill to a location on Mulholland Drive — where other officers and park rangers met them with handcuffs.

The arrestees were not publicly identified and could not be immediately reached for comment Monday.

All six will be cited with misdemeanor trespassing and released, Lurie said. “There’s no vandalism, because the sign wasn’t damaged,” he said.

The site is surrounded by Griffith Park, but is not accessible to the public and is privately maintained by the Hollywood Sign Trust.

A representative for the trust said they were grateful for the fast response from the LAPD.

“It’s unfortunate that such an important icon for the city of L.A. is not being appreciated,” said Mark Panatier, the group’s chairman, who said trespassing to alter the sign is wrong no matter the purported cause.

“This is an icon that’s there for visual reinforcement of the importance of Hollywood, not just for the city of L.A. but to the world,” Panatier said. “It needs to be upheld, it doesn’t need to be demeaned.”

The sign has been changed before. On New Year’s Day 2017, it was changed to read “HOLLYWeeD.”

Steve Alper, 54, a dentist who lives down the hill and owns the vacant Mulholland property where the arrests were made, said he was on his way to grab some lunch when he looked out the window and saw the “HOLLYBOOB” lettering.

By the time he got up to his Mulholland property, the group — who looked to have cameras and other recording gear — were coming down and police were arriving, he said.

“It’s probably just a gag,” he said.

Alper said people trespass on the property all the time, but mostly get scared off by guards or rangers on bullhorns.

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California deputy arrested, accused of staging ‘shocking ambush’

A California sheriff’s deputy was arrested and charged after the district attorney’s office said he staged a “shocking ambush.”

Deputy Sukhdeep Gill, with the Santa Clara County Sheriff’s Office, was taken into custody on Friday and charged with felony vandalism and misdemeanor falsely reporting a crime.

The incident happened last January when just after 10:30 p.m. Gill used the emergency broadcast button on his police radio to report that shots had been fired, according to a release by the district attorney.

Officers from multiple sheriff’s departments responded and a manhunt began for the alleged shooter.

Gill told an officer at the scene that he had parked on the shoulder of a dirt road in Morgan Hill to urinate and as he was walking back to his car, he was shot by a person in a vehicle that had turned its lights off.

Gill said he fired two shots at the vehicle but the car drove away.

The district attorney’s office said that Gill had no serious injuries.

“It appeared he had been shot only once, and in a miraculous spot — his body-worn camera, which was destroyed,” the release stated.

During the investigation into the alleged shooting, Gill’s “story fell apart,” the agency said. Other evidence, including ballistics, also “exposed serious discrepancies in the deputy’s account.”

“This case is bewildering and deeply disappointing,” District Attorney Jeff Rosen said in a statement. “Deputy Gill’s actions abused the trust of his fellow officers and diverted public safety resources away from protecting the community to investigate a made-up crime.”

Gill, 27, could not be reached for comment on Saturday. His attorney, Nicole Pifari, said, “I can tell you we look forward to getting a look at the investigation and the related evidence to understand why these charges are being pursued.”

The deputy has been with the sheriff’s office since 2016. He was placed on administrative leave pending the criminal and administrative investigations.

The Santa Clara County Sherrif’s Office said in a press release that if the allegations against Gill are true, his actions “are not representative of the upstanding men and women of the Sheriff’s Office, who risk their lives every day to serve and protect our community with honesty and integrity.”



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Five men arrested after asylum center set ablaze in UK

The fire broke out on Friday at the Napier Barracks, a decommissioned military complex that now houses asylum-seekers and has been at the center of a recent row between Home Secretary Priti Patel and refugee charities who have called on her to close the facility.

Charities have claimed that the estimated 400 asylum-seekers at the facility have been living in poor conditions in overcrowded dormitories and that a recent Covid-19 outbreak has infected at least 120 people, PA Media reported.

Kent police Saturday said enquiries into the incident were continuing and that “no serious injuries were reported as a result of the incident, however a significant amount of damage was caused to one part of the site following a fire — which is believed to have been started deliberately.”

On Friday, the home secretary took to Twitter to condemn the “shocking scenes” from Napier Barracks where the Home Office said windows were smashed and a building set on fire.

“The damage and destruction at Napier Barracks is not only appalling but deeply offensive to the taxpayers of this country who are providing accommodation while asylum claims are being processed,” Patel tweeted.

“This site has previously accommodated our brave soldiers and army personnel — it is an insult to say that it is not good enough for these individuals,” she added.

Patel’s comments drew some criticism, with the founder of one refugee charity saying the home secretary “should be ashamed of herself” for so quickly pointing the finger at asylum-seekers.

“For a British home secretary to accuse and castigate ordinary people when the facts of this incident are not yet even known is shocking and disturbing,” Clare Mosley, founder of the charity Care4Calais, said in statement sent to CNN.

“This is not simply a careless, off-the-cuff emotional response. It is a misleading, opportunistic smoke screen concocted to deflect attention from the multiple warnings she has had about what was clearly going to happen at Napier barracks,” Mosley added.

Care4Calais, in a Facebook post on Friday, said Napier residents they had spoken to “tell us they are simply terrified.”

“Their future remains uncertain and today’s events create more distress and fear,” it added.

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Former Seattle Seahawks player Chad Wheeler arrested on suspicion of assaulting his girlfriend

Prosecutors on Wednesday charged former Seattle Seahawks offensive tackle Chad Wheeler with first-degree domestic violence assault and domestic violence unlawful imprisonment after he allegedly attacked his girlfriend over the weekend. Both charges are felonies. 

Wheeler was also charged with resisting arrest, a misdemeanor under Washington state law, according to a spokesperson for the King County Prosecuting Attorney’s Office in Washington state.

The charges come hours after the Seahawks issued a statement saying that Wheeler is a free agent and is “no longer with the team.” According to the NFL’s official transaction list, the Seahawks cut Wheeler from the team on Wednesday.

The team encouraged him to seek help and shared information for domestic violence victims and those who suffer from mental health issues.

“The Seahawks are saddened by the details emerging against Chad Wheeler and strongly condemn this act of domestic violence,” the team said. “Our thoughts and support are with the victim.”

Chad Wheeler seen in 2020.

Danny Karnik / AP


Prosecutors said in a filing that Wheeler allegedly attacked and strangled the victim in her bedroom on January 22. He allegedly beat her into unconsciousness twice and left her both times for dead.

According to prosecutors, at one point during the attack, Wheeler allegedly forced his fingers into her mouth and down her throat, and “crushed” his hand down over her nose and mouth while squeezing her throat with his other hand. The woman lost consciousness twice as Wheeler allegedly strangled her, prosecutors said. The victim later recalled trying to roll away, but Wheeler “violently” grabbed her left arm and ripped her body back toward him. 

When she regained consciousness, for the second time, she saw Wheeler come back into the bedroom and told her “Oh, you’re still alive,” according to prosecutors. She ran into the bathroom and locked the door behind her before calling police and telling family members to notify authorities.  

A police report said officers responded to a domestic dispute at an apartment in the city of Kent after Wheeler’s girlfriend called 911 and told the operator she was being “killed.” When they arrived, she was screaming from inside, prompting officers to force entry into the home, the report said.

Wheeler initially resisted arrest before officers detained him, the report said. Prosecutors said officers used a Taser once to his body, but it had little effect. 

His girlfriend was hospitalized after officers found her with her face covered in blood and her left arm was limp against her body, the report said.

The report lists the woman as 5 foot 9 inches tall and weighing 145 pounds and Wheeler at 6 foot 7 inches tall and weighing 310 pounds.

The woman alleged that Wheeler suffers from bi-polar disorder and was taking medication but had not been taking it recently, the report said, adding that she told police the couple previously had been dating for six months without any “notable issues.”

In a series of tweets Wednesday, Wheeler apologized, writing that “events happened over the weekend that transpired from a manic episode.”

“It is time for me to walk away from football and get the help I need to never again pose a threat to another,” he added. “I cannot express my sorrow or remorse enough. I am truly ashamed.”  

Wheeler was booked into King County Jail and was released on a bond of $400,000 on Tuesday, jail records show. A judge ordered Wheeler to have no contact with the victim and to surrender any weapons, according to officials.

Prosecutors asked the court to place Wheeler on electronic home detention and that his ankle monitoring device be equipped with GPS. His next court date is February 9. 

Wheeler went undrafted in 2017 but signed with the New York Giants and played in 19 of 27 games. He was released by the team ahead of the 2019 season and then signed on with the Seahawks’ practice squad. He did not see any on-field action that year but played in five games last season.

Notable figures in the NFL reacted to the news of Wheeler’s arrest and demanded the league to take action.

Pittsburgh Steelers offensive tackle Zach Banner, who was Wheeler’s roommate in college, tweeted that Wheeler is “completely different” than the person he knew. “What he did was heartbreaking, and I will never forgive… My thoughts and prayers go out to the victim. She and her health should be the (utmost) priority.”



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Singer Trey Songz arrested at Arrowhead Stadium during Chiefs, Bills playoff game

R&B artist Trey Songz was arrested at Arrowhead Stadium in Kansas City, Missouri, during an NFL playoff game between the Chiefs and the Buffalo Bills, authorities said Monday.

In a statement, the Jackson County Prosecutor’s office said that Songz, whose real name is Tremaine Neverson, 36, was released early Monday. An investigation into the incident that led to his arrest is continuing, the statement said.

Authorities did not say what charge Songz was booked on and neither the prosecutor’s office nor other local law enforcement agencies would say if a video released by the Kansas City Police Department, appearing to show an assault on an officer, was linked to Songz’ arrest.

A lawyer and representative for Songz declined to comment Monday.

It wasn’t clear if there were other arrests at Sunday’s game. The police department did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

In a statement included with the video, the police department said the man allegedly assaulted an officer after fans complained that he wasn’t following the Arrowhead code of conduct or state health department rules.

The man allegedly refused to comply with requests from private security agents to leave the stadium, the statement said. When he refused, officers told him he would be arrested for trespassing.

The man punched a police officer and put him in a headlock, police said, adding that he was then arrested without incident and booked at Jackson County Jail.

Citing the state’s sunshine law, the department said it could not release the name of a suspect who has not been charged with a crime.

Songz, whose hit singles include “Say Ahh” and “Bottoms Up,” announced in October he had tested positive for Covid-19. The singer and rapper made headlines in December when his indoor performance at an Ohio club, with hundreds of largely maskless attendees, led to a citation of the venue for violating coronavirus regulations.

Diana Dasrath contributed.



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Trey Songz Arrested After Violent Altercation with Cop at Chiefs Game

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Tse Chi Lop, one of the world’s biggest drug dealers, arrested in Amsterdam

Canadian national Tse Chi Lop was detained at Amsterdam’s Schipol International Airport on Friday, according to Australian Federal Police (AFP), which has taken the lead in a sprawling international investigation. Before his arrest, Tse was one of the world’s most-wanted fugitives.

Authorities allege that Tse, 57, is the leader of the Sam Gor Syndicate, arguably the biggest drug-trafficking operation in Asia’s history. Experts say he is in the same league as notorious drug lords El Chapo and Pablo Escobar.

“The importance of Tse’s arrest can not be underestimated. It’s big and (has) been a long time coming,” said Jeremy Douglas, the Regional Representative of the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) in Southeast Asia and the Pacific.

The organization is accused of running a synthetic drug manufacturing empire in large swathes of the under-policed jungles of Myanmar, a region marred by civil war and still under the control of various competing warlords and militias — conditions that make it easy to hide industrial-scale drug manufacturing operations from law enforcement.

From there, Sam Gor has allegedly been able to procure large amounts of precursor chemicals, the ingredients to make synthetic drugs, and then move them across the region to nearby markets in Bangkok, but also to farther-flung ones in Australia and Japan, law enforcement said.

Sam Gor allegedly had operatives working throughout the globe, with players in South Korea, England, Canada and the United States, according to a briefing on the syndicate shared with CNN by an official with direct knowledge of the investigation.

The documents described Sam Gor as a “triad-like network” — a reference to ethnic Chinese gangs that operate in Asia and North America — but more mobile and dynamic. The group’s existence was revealed in 2016 after a Taiwanese drug trafficker was arrested in Yangon, Myanmar, the briefing showed.

Further police investigations revealed that the organization was, as of 2018, earning between $8 billion and $17.7 billion worth of illicit proceeds a year, according to the briefing. The organization uses poorly regulated casinos in Southeast Asia to launder a significant portion of those proceeds.

AFP said a warrant was issued for Tse’s arrest in 2019 in connection with an operation targeting Sam Gor.

“The syndicate targeted Australia over a number of years, importing and distributing large amounts of illicit narcotics, laundering the profits overseas and living off the wealth obtained from crime,” AFP said in a statement.

Tse allegedly ran his multibillion dollar operation from Hong Kong, Macao and southeast Asia. But his name — or existence — was not public knowledge until he was revealed by a Reuters investigation published in 2019.

Dutch police spokesman Thomas Aling said Tse is expected to be extradited after appearing before a judge. Authorities in the Netherlands were unable to provide details about the legal proceedings and it was not clear whether Tse had a lawyer.

This is not Tse’s first run-in with law enforcement. Tse pleaded guilty to felony narcotics charges in the United States in 2000 and was sentenced to nine years in prison. Details surrounding the case are limited because it is still sealed, but the source said he was released in 2006 and returned to Canada before moving to Hong Kong.

While Douglas of the UNODC praised Tse’s arrest, he said more needed to be done to ensure drug lords cannot take advantage of poor government oversight of the areas in Myanmar and Laos.

“While taking down syndicate leadership matters, the conditions they effectively used in the region to do business remain unaddressed, and the network remains in-place,” he said. “A lot of difficult information is about to come out.”

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