Jurors in the case of five members of the right-wing Oath Keepers militia group charged with seditious conspiracy in the Jan. 6 riots at the U.S. Capitol got their first meaningful look at messages from some of the defendants’ accused co-conspirators who pleaded guilty and have been cooperating with the government.
Joshua James, from Alabama, and Brian Ulrich, from Georgia, are two of 11 defendants facing seditious conspiracy and other charges alongside Oath Keepers founder Stewart Rhodes. Rhodes and four co-defendants — Jessica Watkins, Kenneth Harrelson, Thomas Caldwell, and Kelly Meggs — are currently on trial. The remaining defendants are set to go to trial in November.
They are charged with plotting to forcibly stop president Joe Biden from taking office despite a win against Donald Trump in the 2020 presidential election, going so far as to set up a “Quick Reaction Force” that was prepared to ferry a cache of weapons across the Potomac from a hotel in Virginia to the Capitol.
James pleaded guilty to seditious conspiracy and obstruction of Congress in March. Ulrich pleaded guilty to the same charge in April.
William Todd Wilson, a third member of the Oath Keepers who is not charged in the Rhodes case, pleaded guilty to seditious conspiracy in May.
On Wednesday, during the testimony of FBI Special Agent Joanna Abrams, prosecutor Alexandra Hughes shared messages and records that appeared to depict James’ and Ulrich’s roles in the alleged conspiracy.
“Alabama checking in!” wrote James (under the handle “HYDRO AL”) to a Signal chat titled “OK FL Hangout.”
In another Signal chat group, this one called “GA OK General Chat,” Rhodes had posted on Dec. 14, 2020, his hope that Trump would invoke the Insurrection Act. Ulrich, under the handle “Bilbo,” posted a series of messages in support of what Rhodes had suggested.
Ulrich called for efforts to get “every patriot marching” to show the government how “powerless” it is.
Rhodes said that was a “good topic for a phone call” — a response Hughes discussed on redirect.
“Is it fair to say Rhodes isn’t shy from writing voluminous information in text messages?” Hughes asked Abrams.
“Correct,” the agent replied.
“But at this point does he ask for a phone call?” Hughes pressed.
“Yes,” Abrams said.
On Dec. 15, an Oath Keepers member who isn’t part of the case said in the OK GA chat that the group had enough firepower to “overthrow” a “third-world country.” Ulrich responded, asking for more information.
James also posted in an Oath Keepers Signal group called Old Leadership Chat.
“SE Region is creating a NATIONAL CALL TO ACTION FOR DC JAN 6TH… 4 states are mobilizing,” James wrote on Dec. 20, 2020. “RIGHT NOW,” he also wrote.
Abrams also reviewed phone logs from James in the months before Jan. 6, 2021. According to the records, James spoke with Michael Green, the Oath Keepers member also known as “Whip” who was apparently the group’s “operations leader” on Jan. 6, twice in December.
He also spoke with Meggs five times toward the end of the month, and with other Oath Keepers leaders in the first few days of January 2021.