May 23, 2021 Updated: May 24, 2021
The
Department of Justice (DOJ) seized $90,000 from a Utah man who sold footage of
Ashli Babbitt being shot during the Jan. 6 Capitol breach, according to court
filings filed by federal prosecutors.
John Earle Sullivan, a political activist who reportedly attended Black Lives Matter protests last year and who allegedly agitated rioters inside the Capitol, was also charged with new weapons charges, according to the documents unsealed last week.
John Earle Sullivan in a file mugshot photograph. (Utah County Jail)
So
far, more than 400 people have been charged in connection to the breach, which
occurred as members of Congress were voting to certify the 2020 presidential
election.
According
to the court documents, Sullivan portrayed himself as an independent journalist
who was reporting on the chaos, but he actually encouraged other participants
to “burn” the building and engage in violence.
Sullivan
is accused of having a conversation with others who breached
the building and allegedly told them: “We gotta get this [expletive]
burned,” according to court documents in his case.
“There
are so many people. Let’s go. This [expletive] is ours! [Expletive] yeah,” he
allegedly cheered after he and protesters entered the Capitol, the DOJ
documents said. “We accomplished this [expletive]. We did this together.
[Expletive] yeah! We are all a part of this history,” and “let’s burn this
[expletive] down.” The documents accused him of calling on others to burn the
Capitol down multiple times.
At
one point, he’s also heard saying, “I am ready bro. I’ve been to too many
riots. I’ve been in so many riots,” the documents said. “It would be fire
if someone had revolutionary music and [expletive],” prosecutors said Sullivan
told others on Jan. 6.
Prosecutors
furthermore alleged that Sullivan apparently broke a window inside and said, “I
broke it. My bad, my apologies. Well, they already broke a window, so, you
know, I didn’t know I hit it that hard. No one got that on camera.”
After
leaving the Capitol later on Jan. 6, Sullivan was seen, according to
prosecutors, telling another individual that he “brought my megaphone to
instigate [expletives]” and wanted to “make these Trump
supporters [expletive] all this [expletive] up.”
Sullivan
recorded a video of the confrontation between rioters and police near the House
chamber that included the shooting of Air Force veteran Babbitt and, according to
court filings, bragged to a witness that “my footage is worth like a million of
dollars, millions of dollars.”
Sullivan
sold that footage to several news outlets for a total of $90,000, according to
a seizure warrant. The news outlets were redacted from the warrant.
After
the breach in January, Sullivan appeared on several corporate media
outlets including CNN and MSNBC.
During
his CNN appearance in January, Sullivan said that he was “not on the Trump
side” or the “MAGA side” and alleged he was just there to document the
incident.
Sullivan
in July 2020 was arrested in Utah for alleged rioting, making a threat of
violence, and criminal mischief because he engaged in a riot that resulted in
the shooting of a motorist amid nationwide Black Lives Matter demonstrations
last year. He was named as an organizer in a police affidavit.
“As
a protest organizer, John Sullivan is heard talking about seeing the shooting,
looking at the gun, and seeing smoke coming from it. John did not condemn the
attempted murder nor attempt to stop it nor aide in its investigation by
police,” the police affidavit said, according to the Utah-based Deseret News.
Later,
on Dec. 28, Sullivan also wrote on Twitter that he supported an “armed revolution,”
saying that it “is the only way to bring about change effectively.” His account
was later suspended.
Using
the nickname “Jayden X” online, Sullivan tweeted just days before the Capitol
breach that the system should be burned to the ground while adding
anti-capitalist, anti-Trump, and Black Lives Matter hashtags.
Black
Lives Matter leaders in Utah earlier this year disavowed Sullivan, calling him
a “loose cannon.”
And
on Jan. 2, just days before the breach, Sullivan’s account wrote: “[Expletive] The System – Time To Burn It All Down.
#blm #antifa #burn #[expletive]thesystem #abolishcapitalism #abolishthepolice
#acab #[expletive]trump.”
Sullivan’s
lawyer had no comment on the case when he was contacted on Sunday.
The
man’s lawyer, Steven Kiersh, wrote in court documents that the government
should not sieze his money, arguing, “The proceeds of the seized bank account are
not the product of criminal activity alleged in the indictment” and that his
client was being deprived of the money “in violation of the Due Process Clause
of the United States Constitution.”
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