THREAD: In 2023, I received an envelope with no return address. Inside was a flash drive containing tens of 1000s of secret files.
It came from a vigilante with a tumultuous past, who'd done a years-long undercover operation. He didn’t tell the FBI or his family. He only told me
Outraged by Jan 6, he spent two years getting inside the top ranks of militias like the Oath Keepers. He was stunningly successful. He penetrated a new generation of militia leaders, which included doctors, cops & government attorneys.
The files revealed secret operations, like armed patrols rounding up migrants & the surveillance of a student reporter. There were debates over whether to commit terrorism.
And they gave a unique, remarkably intimate window into questions like: Why do so many cops join militias?
Such questions feel more urgent now than ever. Trump has promised to pardon Jan. 6 rioters when he returns to the White House.
Experts warn that could trigger a renaissance for militant extremists, sending them an unprecedented message of protection and support.
The mole’s journey was dangerous and difficult, ethically fraught and often bizarre. He kept a journal with every lie he told so he wouldn’t lose track.
Here’s some photos he provided from an Oath Keepers training.
He met fascinating people along the way, like the retired Las Vegas police detective who claims to be the new national head of the Oath Keepers.
The detective had 3 plaques mounted in his home inscribed with the same Hemingway line: “There is no hunting like the hunting of man."
Back in August, I wrote an investigation based on records the mole sent me, along with extensive interviews with militia members and files I got from several other sources.
To learn what he revealed about the paramilitary movement — and how a mole managed to become a senior leader in a major American militia — read the full story here: propublica.org/article/ap3-oa…
The Oath Keepers leader did not respond to requests for comment. The founder of a major Three Percenter militia that John infiltrated declined to comment, then sent a short follow-up email: “MAGA.”
• • •
Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to
force a refresh
NEW: This is a thread about a political influence project you’ve never heard of.
It involves the man second in line for the presidency and an evangelical pastor who’s quietly forged close relationships with some of the most powerful men in the country.
If you don’t follow evangelical news in Tennessee, you likely don’t know the name Steve Berger.
House Speaker Mike Johnson recently began living with Berger in D.C, we found. The $3.7 million townhouse they’re staying at is owned by a major GOP donor. propublica.org/article/mike-j…
In 2021, Berger, a pastor who’s called the separation of church and state “a delusional lie,” set off on an ambitious project.
His explicit goal: “disciple” the nation’s lawmakers so that what “they learn is then translated into policy.”
I covered Jan 6 as an investigative reporter back in 2021. Ever since, I’d wondered: After the Capitol riot, where does the militia movement go from here?
So I spent the last few months getting inside the turbulent, secretive world of one of the largest militias in the US...
American Patriots 3% has expanded at a dramatic pace since Jan. 6, while keeping much of its activity underground.
I obtained more than 100,000 internal messages from the militia and talked to many current and former members. Here's what I found: propublica.org/article/inside…
It all sheds light on an urgent question: Will Jan. 6 prove the high water mark of militia violence or just a prelude to something more catastrophic?
To give a small taste of how AP3ers are thinking about the 2024 election, one leader predicted “it’ll be decided at the ammo box”
NEW: Did you know that @GovRonDeSantis overruled Florida’s Republican-controlled legislature to push through a Congressional map that dismantled Black-held districts?
Here’s the inside story of how that happened.
It may have violated Florida’s constitution.
First: The DeSantis plan wiped away half of the state’s Black-dominated congressional districts, dramatically curtailing Black voting power in America’s largest swing state. propublica.org/article/ron-de…
One of the districts eliminated by DeSantis had been created by the Florida Supreme Court just seven years before.
DeSantis shattered it, breaking the district into four pieces. He then tucked each fragment away in a majority-white, heavily Republican district.
Last week, Pelosi announced she would create a select committee to investigate Jan. 6.
@jbsapien and I talked to more than 50 people involved in Jan 6, from the Trump White House to far-right militants, and reviewed months of private texts. Here’s some of what we found.
Before we get to the White House news, let’s start with the movement itself.
Even before Jan 6, something strange was happening in conservative grassroots politics.
How that happened and where it’s going from here could have implications well beyond the Capitol riot.
On one side was Women For America First, in many ways a descendant of the Tea Party—a lot of the same people, similar tactics, similar rhetoric.
On the other was Ali Alexander’s Stop the Steal coalition, a new, more extreme element within the GOP grassroots ecosystem.
Last year, I started going to DC eviction court and was shocked by how many tenants lost their cases simply because they didn't show up. I started trying to understand why, and the answer was much stranger & more disturbing than I imagined. dcist.com/story/20/10/05…
Tenants find out about their eviction cases in D.C. through private process servers, who are paid by landlords or their lawyers. And one man has come to dominate the process service industry in D.C.—Karl Stephens, operating out of his home in Silver Spring.
I read through thousands of cases involving Stephens and his associate Matthew Buck. And there was immediately a striking difference from most of their competitors: despite having tenants' addresses, they claim they are basically never able to find them home.
The allegations surrounding seclusion and restraint in D.C. schools are disturbing, and hard to summarize. The techniques are dangerous, but completely unregulated in D.C. public schools and charters. And they're exclusively used against children of color. washingtoncitypaper.com/news/article/2…
The many allegations in D.C. include a child with intellectual disabilities punched the face while she was being restrained, causing vomiting and loss of consciousness, and a nonverbal, autistic child grabbed by the throat and thrown into a bookcase.
Most states strictly regulate seclusion and restraint. Not D.C. A national advocacy group found that D.C. has less protections for children than just about any state in the country.