Skip to content
NOWCAST 바카라게임 온라인 바카라 게임 5 Today
Watch on Demand
Advertisement

There is no evidence that suggests antifa was a part of the storming of the Capitol

There is no evidence that suggests antifa was a part of the storming of the Capitol
the national investigative unit got questions from some of you asking if Wednesday's insurrection could actually be a false flag operation. Perhaps adherents of the Antifa movement, you wondered, posed as Trump supporters. Some lawmakers have taken up that Antifa claim, citing what they've seen online. Some of the people who breached the capital today we're not trump supporters. They were masquerading as Trump supporters and in fact, were members of the violent terrorist group Antifa. So let's get the fax. There is no evidence that all of these lawless writers and insurrectionists or even a significant number draped in trump hats, shirts and flags are part of a clever undercover and TIF operation. The D. C attorney general, who will prosecute arrests and charges, says it is Trump supporters who are trampling on the District of Columbia and have breached the U. S Capitol. The media outlet Axios identified the familiar faces from the far right is part of the riots, and President Trump's hand picked acting secretary of the Department of Homeland Security issued this blunt statement Thursday morning, condemning quote supporters of the president using violence as a means to achieve political ends. This is unacceptable, Secretary Chad Wolf, a Republican, makes no mention of any Antifa activists, not once. The FBI declined our request for comment, but it has launched a website for tips, photos and information about the writers and insurrectionists. Wednesday That website is FBI dot gov slash u. S Capitol. FBI gov slash U S Capitol in Washington I'm chief national investigative correspondent Mark Albert.
Advertisement
There is no evidence that suggests antifa was a part of the storming of the Capitol
Rumors began emerging from far-right circles claiming the pro-Trump mob of protesters that stormed the Capitol on Wednesday was made up or infiltrated by members of antifa, despite no evidence of this being the case.Several posts, particularly on the right-leaning social media platform Parler, shared images that posters claimed as evidence antifa demonstrators were behind the riot. The images did not, however, show any antifa involvement, and in many instances suggested ties to far-right extremist groups like the Proud Boys, or conspiracy movements like QAnon. President Donald Trump, in a now-deleted video to his supporters, even acknowledged the group as his supporters, saying "we love you" and repeating a baseless claim the election was stolen from them. The riot began after Trump, speaking at a rally, directed the crowd to go to the Capitol.Related video: Trump urges Capitol protesters to 'go home now'One frequent act of misinformation being spread is to show a picture of a member of the mob of protesters side by side with a picture of the same person at a Black Lives Matter rally or among a group of antifa members. However these images often leave out context as to whether the person in question was at these rallies as an ally or a counter-protester to groups like BLM. A frequently employed example being the well-recognized man wearing a horned headdress who was a part of the riot. A picture of him attending a BLM protest is often shared suggesting he is secretly an antifa supporter, but while at the BLM protest, he held a counter-protest sign saying "Q SENT ME." The sign is often cropped out.On Twitter, there were more than 1,250 posts from accounts related to the QAnon conspiracy theory about Wednesday's protests containing terms of violence since Jan. 1. The most basic QAnon belief casts President Trump as the hero in a fight against the "deep state" and a sinister cabal of Democratic politicians and celebrities who abuse children.One post from a QAnon-related account retweeted a post with a baseless conspiracy theory that Democrats, Black Lives Matter activists, and Antifa protestors were planning to kill Trump supporters and advocated for whoever noticed these individuals to get "rid of them."Despite the lack of evidence, U.S. Congressmen, Louie Gohmert, R-TX, and Mo Brooks, R-AL, spread this conspiracy theory on Twitter. Later Wednesday night, Congressman Matt Goetz, R-FL, also pushed these false claims while speaking to the House. Lin Wood, a pro-Trump attorney who is involved with the QAnon movement, sent several viral tweets that falsely claimed that members of antifa were inside the Capitol. A commonly shared image he posted features a bearded man wearing a hoodie seen among the mob inside the Capitol posted with another photo of supposedly the same person, the second photo having come from 바카라 게임 웹사이트PhillyAntifa.org,바카라 게임 웹사이트 suggesting he is actually antifa.바카라 게임 웹사이트Indisputable photographic evidence that antifa violently broke into Congress today to inflict harm & do damage,바카라 게임 웹사이트 Wood said on Twitter. 바카라 게임 웹사이트NOT @realDonaldTrump supporters.바카라 게임 웹사이트But the page on phillyantifa.org is not of him being involved with the group, but of the group accusing him to be a member of a neo-Nazi group. CNN contributed to this report.

Rumors began emerging from far-right circles claiming the pro-Trump mob of protesters that stormed the Capitol on Wednesday was made up or infiltrated by members of antifa, despite no evidence of this being the case.

Advertisement

Several posts, particularly on the right-leaning social media platform Parler, shared images that posters claimed as evidence antifa demonstrators were behind the riot. The images did not, however, show any antifa involvement, and in many instances suggested ties to far-right extremist groups like the Proud Boys, or conspiracy movements like QAnon.

President Donald Trump, in a now-deleted video to his supporters, even acknowledged the group as his supporters, saying "we love you" and repeating a baseless claim the election was stolen from them. The riot began after Trump, speaking at a rally, directed the crowd to go to the Capitol.

Related video: Trump urges Capitol protesters to 'go home now'

One frequent act of misinformation being spread is to show a picture of a member of the mob of protesters side by side with a picture of the same person at a Black Lives Matter rally or among a group of antifa members. However these images often leave out context as to whether the person in question was at these rallies as an ally or a counter-protester to groups like BLM.

A frequently employed example being the well-recognized man wearing a horned headdress who was a part of the riot. A picture of him attending a BLM protest is often shared suggesting he is secretly an antifa supporter, but while at the BLM protest, he held a counter-protest sign saying "Q SENT ME." The sign is often cropped out.

On Twitter, there were more than 1,250 posts from accounts related to the QAnon conspiracy theory about Wednesday's protests containing terms of violence since Jan. 1. The most basic QAnon belief casts President Trump as the hero in a fight against the "deep state" and a sinister cabal of Democratic politicians and celebrities who abuse children.

One post from a QAnon-related account retweeted a post with a baseless conspiracy theory that Democrats, Black Lives Matter activists, and Antifa protestors were planning to kill Trump supporters and advocated for whoever noticed these individuals to get "rid of them."

Despite the lack of evidence, U.S. Congressmen, Louie Gohmert, R-TX, and Mo Brooks, R-AL, spread this conspiracy theory on Twitter. Later Wednesday night, Congressman Matt Goetz, R-FL, also pushed these false claims while speaking to the House.

Lin Wood, a pro-Trump attorney who is involved with the QAnon movement, sent several viral tweets that falsely claimed that members of antifa were inside the Capitol. A commonly shared image he posted features a bearded man wearing a hoodie seen among the mob inside the Capitol posted with another photo of supposedly the same person, the second photo having come from 바카라 게임 웹사이트PhillyAntifa.org,바카라 게임 웹사이트 suggesting he is actually antifa.

바카라 게임 웹사이트Indisputable photographic evidence that antifa violently broke into Congress today to inflict harm & do damage,바카라 게임 웹사이트 Wood said on Twitter. 바카라 게임 웹사이트NOT @realDonaldTrump supporters.바카라 게임 웹사이트

But the page on phillyantifa.org is not of him being involved with the group, but of the group .

CNN contributed to this report.