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In the weeks leading up to Wednesday’s storm, there were clear signs that the protests could lead to violence. Online hate groups and right-wing extremists advocated things like civil war and court attacks.
Experts are now warning that incitement to violence has increased further ahead of the presidential inauguration on January 20, when Joe Biden takes over from Donald Trump.
– We see how this white power movement and right-wing extremists speak: they feel empowered right now, Jonathan Greenblatt, CEO of the Anti-Defamation League that documents hate, tells CNN.
John Scott-Railton, a researcher at the University of Toronto Citizen Lab who monitors cybersecurity, says he is “terribly concerned” about the facility.
“Even though the general public was shocked by what happened on Capitol Hill, what happened was seen as a success in some right-wing circles,” he says.
At the same time, it has come more information on what happened in connection with the storm.
According to federal prosecutors, an Alabama man parked a car with eleven homemade bombs, an automatic rifle and a handgun a few blocks from the building. It was several hours before a bomb squad found the explosives in connection with Capitol security after the storm. The 70-year-old man is said to have told police that he had glass jars with molten Styrofoam and gasoline. Federal investigators believe the combination would have had the same effect as napalm had it exploded, with flammable liquid adhering to the objects, legal documents say.
Another man is said to have arrived in Washington with an automatic rifle and large amounts of ammunition. He sent an SMS to acquaintances in which he wrote that he was considering “putting a bullet” in the head of the skull of House of Representatives Nancy Pelosis on live television. In another text message, he wrote about driving on Pelosi, reports CNN.
The FBI is also investigating whether some of those who broke into the Capitol may have intended to kill or take members of Congress hostage. Images show they were wearing cable ties at the same time that one of those arrested was carrying a handgun inside the area, people with knowledge of the investigation told the Washington Post.
– We do not consider this to be a big conspiracy, but we want to know what people would do with things like cable ties, says a person from the judiciary who wants to remain anonymous for the newspaper.
Dozens of people have been arrested and 13 people have been charged with federal crimes related to the storm.
Democrats in the House of Representatives is still threatening to file a lawsuit against Trump, who is accused of inciting violence before the storm. If the proposal is approved by the House of Representatives, the Senate expects to vote on the matter no earlier than January 20 or 21, when the president has already left office. It shows a pm that the Republican Majority Leader in the Senate, Mitch McConnell, sent to senators on Friday, according to CBS News.
On Friday, Twitter closed President Donald Trump’s account @realDonaldTrump. When he later attempted to tweet from his formal presidential account @POTUS, the posts were removed. However, Twitter does not intend to block the latter or the @WhiteHouse account or account, but claims that it will restrict the use, according to CNN.
Five people were killed in the assault on the Capitol, including a police officer.
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Therefore, the images of the attack go down in history