Proud Boys hit with million-dollar fine; Jan. 6 suspect arrested near Obama's home


Leaders of the extremist street gang the Proud Boys were ordered to pay more than $1 million in damages to a historic Black church in Washington D.C. that they vandalized during a demonstration in December 2020. Meanwhile, a Jan. 6 defendant was arrested last week near the home of former president Barack Obama and accused of threatening to detonate explosives. And June saw a spike in arrests of Jan. 6 suspects, but scores more who have been identified to the FBI by volunteers remain free.

It’s the week in extremism.

Members of the Proud Boys, including Joe Biggs of Ormond Beach, third from right, and other right-wing demonstrators march across the Steel Bridge on Aug. 17, 2019, in Portland, Oregon. Biggs had organized an "End Domestic Terrorism" rally there as an anti-Antifa rally.

Proud Boys ordered to pay $1 million

On Saturday, Washington, D.C., judge Neal Kravitz ordered leaders of the Proud Boys to pay more than $1 million in damages to the Metropolitan African Methodist Episcopal Church. The judgment resulted from a lawsuit filed against named and unnamed members of the extremist street gang by the Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights Under Law, on behalf of the church.

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