Police Name Anarchist as Suspect Who Allegedly Incited Violence During Protest

Zachary Stieber
By Zachary Stieber
June 1, 2020US News
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Police Name Anarchist as Suspect Who Allegedly Incited Violence During Protest
An anarchist identified as Brian Jordan Bartels was captured on video damaging a police car in Pittsburgh, Penn. (Pittsburgh Bureau of Police)

Police officers in Pennsylvania on Sunday served a search warrant for a man who identifies himself as an anarchist and has possible ties to the far-left extremist group, Antifa.

Brian Jordan Bartels, 20, was captured on video damaging a police car during protests in Pittsburgh on May 30.

According to the Pittsburgh Bureau of Police, Bartels “incited Saturday’s violence by breaking the windows out of a marked Pittsburgh Police vehicle Uptown, against the wishes of peaceful protesters who tried to stop him.”

The suspect wasn’t at the residence in Shaler but investigators found evidence linking him to the crime.

According to a search warrant obtained by WPXI, investigators found two firearms, cans of spray paint, and a sweatshirt with white writing.

Bartels works at Amazon. The company didn’t immediately respond when asked if it’s taking any action regarding his employment.

An arrest warrant was issued and Bartels faces charges of institutional vandalism, rioting, and reckless endangerment of another person.

Photographs and videos show Bartels dressed in all black, wearing a face covering emblazoned with an anarchist symbol commonly worn by people affiliated with Antifa, a group with communist roots that explicitly advocates violence against people with a wide array of views, including police officers, reporters, and some conservatives.

Bartels was seen on video with several others causing destruction to the police cruiser while protesters tried to get them to stop, saying it wasn’t helping the situation.

Riots have taken place alongside peaceful protests in cities across the nation in the wake of the death of George Floyd, a black man who was arrested last month in Minneapolis and died in police custody after a police officer was shown kneeling on his neck.

Two vehicles were set on fire during Saturday’s protest and protesters attacked at least three reporters and some “innocent bystanders,” Wendell Hissrich, Pittsburgh’s director of public safety, told reporters on Saturday. His agency said 60 businesses and properties were damaged by “rioters/looters,” including hotels, restaurants, and small businesses.

People involved in the protest also damaged or looted at least 12 buildings in Pittsburgh. Destruction of property and violence have quickly become hallmarks of gatherings in cities across the United States.

Police detain protesters
Police detain protesters for being in the street during a protest in response to the police killing of George Floyd in Atlanta, Ga., on May 30, 2020. (Elijah Nouvelage/Getty Images)

A peaceful protest turned into a riot, with people hurling rocks at people, throwing cans, and injuring police officers and journalists, Pittsburgh Police Chief Scott Schubert told reporters.

Officers are working to track down those who inflicted damage and fostered violence, he added, blaming “white males, dressed in the anarchist Antifa [clothing].”

“We will look at every video that we have, and we will do everything we can with our technology to find the ones who were responsible for a lot of this,” Schubert said. “I’m just so angry at the fact that some segment hijacked this and then took some of the youth and brought them into the mix.”

Federal officials are investigating the organizers and instigators of violence at protests, utilizing the 56 regional FBI Joint Terrorism Task Forces. “The violence instigated and carried out by Antifa and other similar groups in connection with the rioting is domestic terrorism and will be treated accordingly,” Attorney General William Barr said in a statement.

Pittsburgh Mayor Bill Peduto, a Democrat, said in a statement that thousands of people marched before their event “was hijacked by a group of 100+ Anarchists – focused only on violence.” He directed people to the footage showing Bartels.

A Pittsburgh police spokeswoman told The Epoch Times Monday that the bureau had no new information about Bartels. City officials said Monday that a curfew imposed over the weekend would remain in effect until Tuesday morning.

At least forty-four people were arrested at the protest, primarily on charges of failure to disperse and disorderly conduct. Of those arrested, 16 live in Pittsburgh and the rest live in nearby municipalities.

From The Epoch Times

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