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‘Absurd’ To Call Oath Keepers Insurrectionists Or A National Security Threat, Former FBI Agent Testifies

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‘Absurd’ To Call Oath Keepers Insurrectionists Or A National Security Threat, Former FBI Agent Testifies

Authored by Joseph Hanneman via The Epoch Times,

TheĀ Oath KeepersĀ did not try to overthrow the U.S. government on Jan. 6 and are not a threat to national security because the group is anti-tyranny, not anti-government, a former FBI agent and Department of Defense analyst testified Dec. 15-16 inĀ AlaskaĀ Superior Court.

John Guandolo, who handled counter-terrorism and criminal investigations during nearly 13 years as an FBI special agent, said he found ā€œabsurdā€ the idea that Oath Keepers tried to overthrow the federal government. Guandolo was at the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, in a personal capacity.

Some of the Oath Keepers might have broken federal laws on Jan. 6 for allegedly trying to delay the counting of Electoral College votes, Guandolo said, ā€œbut to conflate that to being the same as the entire organization wants to overthrow the U.S. government by violence ā€¦ thatā€™s absurd,ā€ Guandolo said. ā€œAnd I think itā€™s an unprofessional assessment.ā€

Guandoloā€™s testimony came on the third and fourth days of a state trial to determine if Rep. David Eastman (R-Wasilla) should be removed from office under the Alaska Constitution because he is a life member of the Oath Keepers. Eastman won reelection on Nov. 8 by a 24-point margin.

Alaska Superior Court Judge Jack McKenna issued a temporary restraining order preventing the state of Alaska from certifying the House 27th District election results until the trial ends.

Former GOP candidate Randall Kowalkeā€”who left the Republican Party in 2019ā€”sued Eastman personally in July, claiming a loyalty clause in the Alaska Constitution should bar him from office because the Oath Keepers allegedly advocate for the overthrow of the federal government.

Alaska State Rep. David Eastman (R-Wasilla) was sued in July 2022 in an effort to force him from office for being a member of Oath Keepers. (Photo courtesy of David Eastman)

Earlier in the bench trial before McKenna, two analysts from centers on domestic extremism testified that the Oath Keepers went into the Capitol on Jan. 6 and tried to overthrow the government.

ā€˜A Far Cryā€™ from Insurrection

Testifying from his office in Dallas, Guandolo told the judge there is no evidence to support that accusation. He ripped the testimony of analysts Jonathan Lewis and Matthew Kriner as ā€œgrossly incompleteā€ and ā€œwholly unprofessional.ā€

Oath Keepers founder Elmer Stewart Rhodes III and Oath Keepers Florida leader Kelly Meggs were found guilty of seditious conspiracy on Nov. 29 for actions on Jan. 6, in a jury trial in U.S. District Court in Washington. Four other defendants were acquitted of seditious conspiracy, but convicted of other offenses.

ā€œThe phrase that I saw most often [in indictments] was that so-and-so intended to affect the government by stopping or delaying the congressional proceeding, which was to certify the election,ā€ Guandolo said when questioned by defense attorney Joseph Miller.

ā€œThat is a far cry from overthrowing the U.S. government by force of violence.ā€

Guandolo said the plaintiffā€™s experts appeared to have pre-existing ideas about the Oath Keepers, because they failed to examine the good work the group does, such as hurricane relief and guarding a bakery against mob violence during protests in Ferguson, Missouri, in the summer of 2014.

He noted their alleged lack of knowledge of Jan. 6 provocateur Ray Epps, and their failure to interview even one member of the Oath Keepers as evidence.

In earlier testimony, Lewis, a research fellow at the Program on Extremism at George Washington University, claimed that Epps did not incite people to go into the Capitol on Jan. 6. He said that was a ā€œdiscredited conspiracy theory.ā€

Viral videos showed Epps in downtown Washington on the evening of Jan. 5 saying: ā€œTomorrowā€”I donā€™t even like to say it because Iā€™ll be arrestedā€”we need to go into the Capitol.ā€

Guandolo said the plaintiffā€™s focus ā€œwas on only specific negative acts and opining on those specific negative acts, without any mention, and, again, based on their own testimony, no apparent knowledge of the positives and the mission statement across the country at the numerous operations the Oath Keepers have undertaken since their founding.ā€

After meeting and speaking with ā€œhundredsā€ of Oath Keepers over the years, Guandolo said, he concluded the group has no bias against the government.

ā€œThey are not anti-government or anti-authority,ā€ Guandolo said.

ā€œTheyā€™re anti-tyranny and anti-anything that infringes on the natural rights and constitutional rights of American citizens.ā€

Guandolo expressed concern with the use of terms such as ā€œdomestic violent extremism,ā€ used by academic experts and even in a recent FBI bulletin on domestic threats in America.

ā€œThere is no legal definition for violent extremism, which is exactly our adversariesā€™ intent,ā€ Guandolo said. ā€œAnd as a matter of fact, I heard yesterday the phrase ā€˜violent extremismā€™ defined by plaintiffsā€™ witness as somebody whoā€™s willing to do violence in furtherance of achieving their goal.

Stewart Rhodes, founder of the Oath Keepers, appears on a screen during a House Select Committee hearing to Investigate the Jan. 6 Attack on the U.S. Capitol, in the Cannon House Office Building on Capitol Hill in Washington on June 9, 2022. (Brendan Smialowski/AFP via Getty Images)

ā€œAnd whatā€™s problematic about that from a legal standpoint,ā€ he said, ā€œis that describes members of the U.S. military, that describes police officers, that describes U.S. citizens who are exercising their natural right to defend themselves, as well as their constitutional right to do so and their lawful right to do so.ā€

Use of the term domestic violent extremism is ā€œan information operation,ā€ Guandolo said, because ā€œit doesnā€™t legally actually define anything. And the way the plaintiffā€™s witnesses defined it, it basically can be used against anybody that uses violence. And violence is neither good nor bad.ā€

ā€˜I Couldnā€™t Tell You Thatā€™

Kriner, a senior research scholar at the Center on Terrorism, Extremism and Counterterrorism at the Middlebury Institute of International Studies, was asked by Miller on Dec. 15, ā€œWhy do we even have an oath to the Constitution?ā€

Kriner replied: ā€œI couldnā€™t tell you that.ā€

Guandolo said he was troubled by that answer. ā€œAgain, I and Iā€™m not trying to make any other kind of statement other than it tells me itā€™s either a grossly biased perspective that the witness is coming from, or they just donā€™t know,ā€ Guandolo said. ā€œAnd in either case, I think is really unprofessional.ā€

The oath to defend the Constitution against ā€œall enemies, foreign and domestic,ā€ is a crucial part of America, Guandolo said.

ā€œā€¦ When police officers and military people and elected officials and judges take these oaths, it literally is the foundation for our entire system,ā€ he said, ā€œbecause our fidelity is to the Constitution.ā€

Guandolo said Oath Keepers Vice President Greg McWhirter, who also served as an FBI informant during the Jan. 6 investigation, would have been ā€œduty-bound, if there was a known, organized effort to overthrow the U.S. government,ā€ to report it.

McWhirterā€™s role as an FBI informant came out during the Rhodes trial. A former sheriffā€™s deputy in Marion County, Ind.,Ā  McWhirter suffered a cardiac event just before his scheduled trip from Montana to Washington to testify in the trial.

ā€œMr. McWhirter, you know, obviously had access to Mr. Rhodes, knew ā€¦ what Oath Keepers was doing and what they were up to,ā€ Guandolo said, ā€œand of course he would have been duty-bound to report something such as an organized effort to violently overthrow the government.ā€

Tyler Durden
Sat, 12/17/2022 – 23:30

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