Jan. 6 defendant arrested at Obama's home hit with new felony charges

Three of the new charges relate to guns and ammunition that were allegedly found in Taylor Taranto's van when he was arrested

In this image from U.S. Capitol Police security video, released and annotated by the Justice Department in the Statement of Facts supporting an arrest warrant, Taylor Taranto, circled in yellow, enters the U.S. Capitol through the Upper West Terrace door on Jan. 6, 2021, in Washington. A Capitol riot suspect who had guns and hundreds of rounds of ammunition in his van when he was arrested near former President Barack Obama’s Washington home has been indicted on federal firearms charges. Taranto was already facing misdemeanor charges stemming from his alleged involvement in the Jan. 6 riot.
Justice Department via AP

A Jan. 6 defendant who was arrested near the Washington home of former President Barack Obama over the summer after former President Donald Trump posted a screenshot that included the address has been hit with five new charges.

A federal grand jury returned a superseding indictment against Taylor Taranto, who as NBC News reported was first identified by online sleuths back in 2021, but wasn't arrested until June 2023 when he showed up near Obama's home.

Three of the new charges relate to guns and ammunition that were allegedly found in Taranto's van when he was arrested. Taranto also faces a felony charge of obstruction of an official proceeding for his conduct on Jan. 6. He also faces a charge of false information and hoaxes for allegedly falsely threatening that he was going to set off an explosive at the National Institute of Standards and Technology before his eventual arrest.

On Jan. 6, 2021, supporters of former President Donald Trump stormed the U.S. Capitol during the certification of Electoral College votes. NBCLX Political Editor Noah Pransky brings you a timeline of the day and the aftermath.

After he was identified by online “sedition hunters” but before his arrest, Taranto and another man, David Walls-Kaufman, were sued by the widow of the late Officer Jeffrey Smith. Smith was assaulted on Jan. 6 and died by suicide days after the Capitol attack. His death was ruled to have occurred in the line of duty.

The civil wrongful death lawsuit filed by Smith's widow alleges that Taranto and Walls-Kaufman contributed to Smith's death. Taranto was seen in multiple videos cited in the lawsuit carrying a weaponized cane near Smith during a scuffle between officers and rioters, in which Smith appeared to be assaulted.

Smith's own body-worn camera footage, released as a result of the lawsuit, also shows a separate incident in which Smith was hit with a flying metal object, an event that occurred hours after he was near Walls-Kaufman and Taranto inside the Capitol.

Taranto showed up to Walls-Kaufman's sentencing on Jan. 6 charges in Washington in June 2023, the same month he was arrested outside the Obama residence. Walls-Kaufman, who was not charged with assault but who admitted he "scuffled" with officers, was sentenced to 60 days in federal prison, and was released in September, according to Bureau of Prisons records. The civil suit against both men is still pending.

Taranto has been ordered held until trial, and a trial date is currently set for July. In the lead-up to Taranto's arrest, he was seen on livestreams spending time near the Washington jail where a small percentage of Jan. 6 defendants are being held pretrial, and where supporters of the defendants have gathered on a nightly basis. The government said that Taranto traveled to Washington in response to then-Speaker Kevin McCarthy’s "offer to produce January 6 video.”

Trump posted a screenshot that included the address of Obama's Washington home on his Truth Social account on June 29, 2023. Taranto reposted Trump's post on his own Truth Social account, prosecutors said, and then posted about being outside the residence that same day.

“We got these losers surrounded!" Taranto posted on Telegram, according to prosecutors. "See you in hell, Podesta’s and Obama’s."

Taranto was eventually apprehended near Rock Creek Parkway after lingering in the woods near Obama's home while livestreaming.

Taranto, a former member of the military, had "successfully worked for many years with a mental health therapist and psychiatrist" through the Veterans Affairs Department, according to a court ruling. But in ordering Taranto held pre-trial, Judge Carl Nichols said he could not "be confident" that mental health treatment plans proposed by Taranto's attorney would provide "sufficient safeguards in light of Taranto's recent escalating behavior."

More than 1,250 defendants have been charged in connection with the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol, and prosecutors have secured more than 900 convictions. Hundreds of additional rioters have been identified but not arrested, including a man who appears to have fired a gun in the air during the attack in newly surfaced footage.

This story first appeared on NBCNews.com. More from NBC News:

Copyright NBC News
Contact Us