Yeah, this is not going to be over anytime soon, and it's not going to end until a lot of people are involved in court. And oy, are some of them going to give their defense attorneys headaches:Feds say confederate flag guy’s son:
— Ryan J. Reilly (@ryanjreilly) January 14, 2021
1) Took a selfie in the building.
2) Bragged about being in the Capitol with his father.
Then his dad told the feds that that his son entered into a criminal conspiracy by clearing glass from a Capitol window that was smashed by a 2 x 4. pic.twitter.com/uKLMbnxx5f
There may be a lot of rot to clear out, too:“Hello nice FBI lady, here are the links to the videos” [my crimes] pic.twitter.com/KjOFGYIxU5
— Seamus Hughes (@SeamusHughes) January 14, 2021
No, not just in D.C.NEW: About 20 US Capitol Police officers under investigation for possible misconduct, but could eventually be “broader than that”, per Rep Tim Ryan (D-OH)
— Scott MacFarlane (@MacFarlaneNews) January 14, 2021
Meanwhile, in the brave new world of technology:Updated story: Houston Police Chief Art Acevedo announced Thursday that an 18-year veteran of the department who is under investigation after participating in the U.S. Capitol riot has resigned. https://t.co/VBiKoEODfw
— Texas Tribune (@TexasTribune) January 14, 2021
Google sends me a report monthly of everywhere my phone has been (which means I've been there, too). It's not hard to figure that one out, especially if you are bent on criminal conduct. Unless you're so stupid you think that when you do it, it's not a crime.DOJ makes clear that if you had a cell phone on inside the Capitol on Jan. 6, you will get caught. pic.twitter.com/nLXaeG1RpE
— Kyle Cheney (@kyledcheney) January 14, 2021
It has never failed to amaze me how people don't realize how their phones, their own internet use is them surrendering their privacy. If they can track them this way, what's to keep any country, any corporation, any gang of tech savvy criminals from tracking them and what they choose to put up about themselves.
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