Capitol Riot

West Virginia Delegate Who Recorded Himself Storming US Capitol Facing Federal Charge

Del. Derrick Evans is charged with unlawful entry of the Capitol

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A West Virginia lawmaker who posted video of himself and other supporters of President Trump rushing into the U.S. Capitol is facing a federal charge in the siege.

The Department of Justice has charged West Virginia state Del. Derrick Evans, a Republican, with unlawful entry of the Capitol, News4 learned Friday.

In the video by Evans, later deleted from his social media page, he is shown wearing a helmet and clamoring at the door to breach the building in Washington, D.C.

“We’re in! Keep it moving, baby!” he said in a packed doorway amid Trump followers holding flags and complaining of being pepper sprayed.

Once inside, Evans could be seen on video milling around the Capitol Rotunda, where historical paintings depict the republic’s founding, and yelled “no vandalizing.” He could be heard chanting Trump’s name.

The speaker of the state House of Delegates, Roger Hanshaw, said Evans will need to "answer to his constituents and colleagues regarding his involvement in what has occurred" Wednesday.

In a statement, the West Virginia Democratic Party said: "He must be held accountable for participating in an act of insurrection against the United States government and risking the lives of lawmakers and Capitol police. The West Virginia Democratic Party calls for his immediate resignation from the House of Delegates and that he be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law.”

Photos: Pro-Trump Supporters Breach the Capitol Building

The delegate from Wayne County said in a statement later on Facebook that he was heading back to West Virginia and “was simply there as an independent member of the media to film history.”

Evans was among Trump supporters who traveled to the nation’s capital to protest the results of the Electoral College on Tuesday and Wednesday. Their anger over baseless claims of fraud in the presidential race led to a mob storming and occupying the Capitol building, interrupting the expected vote count declaring Democrat Joe Biden’s victory.

“The violence that we are witnessing right now in Washington, D.C., is absolutely unacceptable and I condemn it in the strongest possible terms,” Republican Gov. Jim Justice said in a tweet Wednesday. “People have every right to have their voices heard peacefully. But there is no place in our country for this type of activity.”

"I've never seen anything like this in my 20 year career": News4's Shomari Stone reacts to how pro-Trump protests have swarmed the Capitol.

Republican Sen. Shelley Moore Capito also lamented the protest.

“This is the United States of America,” she said in a statement. “We don’t do this. It’s not who we are.”

Republican U.S. Rep. Alex Mooney tweeted a picture of himself holding an escape hood, adding that he was safe after the Capitol was breached.

In the lead up to Congress counting the Electoral College vote, the West Virginia GOP on Twitter amplified falsehoods that Biden didn’t win the election. After the attack on the Capitol, the party’s account retweeted a video from Trump where he told his “very special” supporters to go home.

Trump said “we have to have peace,” but not without repeating baseless claims the election was stolen.

NBC Washington/Associated Press
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