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‘Pizzagate’ shooting suspect facing new federal charge

The criminal case against the North Carolina man whom police say fired shots in a Washington pizzeria while investigating an online conspiracy theory escalated ...
Comet Ping Pong restaurant – suspect arrest

The criminal case against the North Carolina man whom police say fired shots in a Washington pizzeria while investigating an online conspiracy theory escalated to federal district court Tuesday, as prosecutors revealed new details about Edgar Welch’s alleged plans for an armed siege.

After reading a false story circulating online that the Comet Ping Pong restaurant in Northwest DC was harboring child sex slaves — a conspiracy theory that came to be known as “Pizzagate” — 28-year-old Welch allegedly traveled to the nation’s capital armed with an assault rifle, a .38 caliber revolver, a loaded shotgun, and multiple rounds of ammunition in order to “investigate” these reports on his own and “rescue” the children, according to court documents.

Welch allegedly told police that “while he was in the restaurant, he searched for evidence of hidden rooms or tunnels, or child sex-trafficking of any kind” — finding none after he attempted to force open a locked door with a butter knife and then climbed on furniture to peek into a closed-off room.

No one was injured in the nearly 30-minute ordeal, but prosecutors allege Welch fired his AR-15 multiple times inside the restaurant and pointed it at a Comet employee he encountered before surrendering to police.

The federal complaint provides a further glimpse into Welch’s alleged activities in the days leading up to the incident on December 4, including his cell phone calls and text messages.

Prosecutors allege that “(t)he evidence from Welch’s cell phone also suggests that Welch attempted to recruit at least two other people to join him,” including by talking about “(r)aiding a pedo ring, possibly sacrificing (sic) the lives of a few for the lives of many,” according to the complaint.

Additionally, Welch allegedly recorded a video on his cell phone the morning of his drive to DC in which he “told his family members he loved them.”

Although Welch originally faced only local gun-related charges, the US attorney’s office for the District of Columbia dropped all local charges Tuesday and will now proceed with a more serious federal charge against Welch for interstate transportation of a firearm with intent to commit an offense, which carries a statutory maximum of 10 years in prison.

Welch appeared briefly in federal court before Magistrate Judge G. Michael Harvey on Tuesday, appearing cleanly shaven and donning a new short haircut. Harvey appointed a public defender after Welch indicated that he had no job at the moment and “less than $100 in the bank.”

Welch will remain in custody and is next scheduled to appear in court Friday morning for a detention hearing.

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