FBI is Vetting 25k N.Guard Troops Suspecting Some Might Be Trumpies

 
Members of the US National Guard leave the US Capitol to take positions outside after an "external security threat" prior to a dress rehearsal for the 59th inaugural ceremony for President-elect Joe Biden and Vice President-elect Kamala Harris, at the US

Suspecting does not mean evidence they are. All soldiers are Vetted but sometimes an Apple goes bad. After the failure in the Capital that could have cost the lives of some of the elected leader in our government, the FBI which is in charge of this together with the Secret Service will take no chances but we always had a 9/11 all over again. I see American flags in so many homes and today I saw a real big one on the rear of F.D. Ambulance in Staten Island. But Im not sure wether it means they are for our democracy or against since all those vicious people who crashed the Capital ready to killed and they did also had American flags. I saw a muteneer hit a cop with the pole of an American flags and some of those poles were baseball bats and pipes. So this is going to take time for me to realized what this flag really means today. Maybe Im just in shock.

Adam Gonzalez

 
      VICE



With tens of thousands of National Guard members heading to D.C. for President-elect Joe Biden’s inauguration, the FBI and Department of Defense are reportedly digging into their backgrounds in order to head off a potential attack or disaster similar to the overrunning of the Capitol on Jan. 6. 

There will be 25,000 troops stationed in D.C., a beefed up presence from the more than 10,000 members who were on duty for President Barack Obama’s first inauguration in 2009, and roughly 7,400 for President Donald Trump’s inauguration four years ago. The FBI will vet all of them in an attempt to root out potential threats to the inauguration, the Associated Press reported Monday.  Biden’s inauguration will see the largest deployment of American troops in the nation’s capital since the Civil War. 

The move follows the pro-Trump riots at the Capitol earlier this month, which has so far resulted in over a hundred arrests and five deaths, including one Capitol Police officer. Virginia National Guard infantryman Jacob Fracker, who is also a police officer in Rocky Mount, Virginia, was arrested for his alleged involvement in the riot, and is one of dozens of police officers either under internal or criminal investigation.

During the riot, Gov. Ralph Northam deployed the National Guard to assist Capitol police, and Northam later extended the deployment through Biden’s inauguration.

Timothy Hale-Cusanelli, an Army reservist and Naval contractor from New Jersey who’s allegedly a white supremacist and neo-Nazi sympathizer, was arrested Sunday and charged with multiple counts related to the Jan. 6 riot. Hale-Cusanelli is allegedly “an avowed white supremacist and Nazi sympathizer” and has a “secret” security clearance at Naval Weapons Station Earle in New Jersey, where he “has access to a variety of munitions,” according to a sworn affadavit signed by a Naval Criminal Investigative Services (NCIS) agent. 



 

 ”We’re continually going through the process, and taking second, third looks at every one of the individuals assigned to this operation,” Army Secretary Ryan McCarthy told the AP. “We need to be conscious of it and we need to put all of the mechanisms in place to thoroughly vet these men and women who would support any operations like this.”


The Secret Service declined to say what methods they would use to vet the National Guard troops, though former FBI national security supervisor David Gomez told the AP that the process would likely involve using databases and watchlists to find red flags.

“In order to maintain critical operational security surrounding the 59th Presidential Inauguration, the U.S. Secret Service and our law enforcement partners will not be commenting on the means and methods used to conduct the agency mission, inclusive of protective intelligence matters,” the Secret Service told VICE News in a statement. 

National Guard Bureau Chief Gen. Daniel Hokanson told the AP that “if there’s any indication that any of our soldiers or airmen are expressing things that are extremist views, it’s either handed over to law enforcement or dealt with the chain of command immediately.”

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