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The Guardian - US
The Guardian - US
World
Martin Pengelly

Tennessee man involved in Capitol riot guilty of plot to kill federal agents

Supporters of Donald Trump confront US police officers outside the Capitol on 6 January 2021.
Supporters of Donald Trump confront US police officers outside the Capitol on 6 January 2021. Photograph: Manuel Balce Ceneta/AP

A Donald Trump supporter convicted for his part in the deadly January 6 attack on Congress was convicted a second time, this time for plotting to kill FBI special agents.

Edward Kelley, from Tennessee, developed a “kill list” of officials who investigated his participation in the January 2021 attack on the US Capitol, the US Department of Justice said, after the conviction was secured on Wednesday.

“Every hit has to hurt,” Kelley said in recorded remarks, according to the justice department. “Every hit has to hurt.”

Trump supporters attacked the Capitol on 6 January 2021, after Trump told them to “fight like hell” to overturn his conclusive defeat by Joe Biden in the 2020 presidential election. Nine deaths are now linked to the riot, including law enforcement suicides.

Trump was impeached for inciting an insurrection but acquitted when enough Senate Republicans stayed loyal, leaving him free to run for office again. The former president still claims the 2020 election was affected by widespread electoral fraud – a lie he has not pursued about the 2024 election, in which he beat Kamala Harris.

Nearly 1,500 people have been charged over the January 6 riot and more than 1,100 convicted. Trump has repeatedly promised pardons.

Kelley – a 35-year-old anti-abortion activist from Maryville, Tennessee – was the fourth rioter to enter the Capitol on January 6. Prosecutors said he was carrying a gun.

Earlier this month, Kelley was convicted of three felonies – assaulting law enforcement, civil disorder and destruction of government property – and eight misdemeanors. He is due to be sentenced on those charges on 7 April next year.

On Wednesday, in a separate trial in Tennessee, a jury took just an hour to unanimously convict Kelley of conspiracy to murder federal employees, solicitation to commit a crime of violence and influencing a federal official by threat. Sentencing was scheduled for 7 May.

According to the US justice department, “a cooperating defendant, who previously pleaded guilty to his role in the conspiracy, testified that he and Kelley planned attacks on the Knoxville FBI field office using car bombs and incendiary devices appended to drones”.

The cooperating defendant “also testified that the conspirators strategized about assassinating FBI employees in their homes and in public places such as movie theaters”.

Kelley made “videos containing images of certain FBI employees” identified on his “kill list”, the department said.

The FBI director, Christopher Wray, said: “While awaiting trial for committing violent acts, Edward Kelley planned and conspired to attack our employees at work and at home for carrying out their duties. The FBI will never tolerate violent threats against our workforce or any of our colleagues in law enforcement and will continue our work to ensure they are held accountable.”

Trump has called those convicted over January 6 “warriors”, “unbelievable patriots” and “hostages”.

Last week, the Trump transition team told NBC Trump would “make pardon decisions on a case-by-case basis”.

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