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DeSantis Mobilizes National Guard Ahead Of Anticipated Capitol Protests, Biden Inauguration

Zip code 32304 is considered one of Florida's poorest. Low-income families live alongside college students who are more likely to be infected with the coronavirus. But Epidemiologist Dr. Perry Brown says the risk low-income families in the area have has less to do with living near college students and more to do with the choices they make every day.
Felix Mizioznikov
/
Adobe Stock
Zip code 32304 is considered one of Florida's poorest. Low-income families live alongside college students who are more likely to be infected with the coronavirus. But Epidemiologist Dr. Perry Brown says the risk low-income families in the area have has less to do with living near college students and more to do with the choices they make every day.

Gov. Ron DeSantis on Friday evening activated the Florida National Guard to assist state and local law enforcement agencies, following FBI warnings of potentially violent protests in state capitals this weekend in advance of President-elect Joe Biden's inauguration.

The governor's executive order mobilizing the guard was issued "in response to reports of potential civil unrest," DeSantis' office said in a press release.

Friday's order, which went into immediate effect and will last until Jan. 24, instructs the state National Guard to assist the Florida Department of Law Enforcement "in its coordination with local authorities in state capitol operations and in its efforts to protect the state, its citizens, and public buildings and property from any potential civil unrest."

DeSantis issued the order hours after Tallahassee Mayor John Dailey asked the governor to call in the Guard to help protect the state Capitol.

Earlier Friday, federal prosecutors accused a Tallahassee man of plotting to “violently confront protesters” at the Florida Capitol on Sunday

The arrest came more than a week after supporters of President Donald Trump stormed the U.S. Capitol as members of Congress met to certify electoral votes that finalized Biden’s victory. It also came as authorities in Washington, D.C., Tallahassee and other state capitals prepare for potential protests this weekend or early next week.

The precautions have come after an internal FBI bulletin warned that “armed protests” in the days leading up to Biden’s inauguration are being organized by Trump supporters at state capitals.

Local officials on Thursday ordered Tallahassee City Hall and the Leon County Courthouse, which are each across the street from the state Capitol, to close Tuesday and Wednesday in anticipation of possible protests. Biden and Vice President-elect Kamala Harris will be sworn in Wednesday in Washington.

Asking DeSantis to mobilize troops in Tallahassee, Dailey on Friday pointed to National Guard members who will be in Washington to help with the inauguration.

“I am glad that our state is deploying 600 National Guard troops to help protect the U.S. Capitol, but with the clearly expressed threat being state capitols --- and with the news today that a Tallahassee man has been arrested by federal law enforcement for issuing a ‘call to arms for like-minded individuals to violently confront protesters gathered at the Florida Capitol this Sunday’ --- I believe that more resources are necessary,” Dailey said in a prepared statement.

U.S. Attorney for the Northern District of Florida Lawrence Keefe on Friday announced the arrest of Daniel Baker, with a news release from Keefe’s office alleging that Baker “specifically called for others to join him in encircling any protesters and confining them at the Capitol complex using firearms.”

A criminal complaint against Baker detailed a history of social media posts “expressing his belief in violent tactics.” It cited an online article in which authorities say Baker described himself as a “hardcore leftist.” The complaint also included various Facebook posts from Baker that described his ideology, with one saying, “I'm an anarchist and I want to watch capitalist society burn."

Baker traveled across the country to participate in protests over the summer, the complaint said.

Keefe said in a prepared statement that Baker’s arrest serves as “a message to anyone who intends to incite or commit violence in the Northern District of Florida: If you represent a threat to public safety, we will come for you, we will find you, and we will prosecute you.”

“Extremists intent on violence from either end of the political and social spectrums must be stopped, and they will be stopped,” Keefe continued. “The diligent work in this case by the FBI and other public safety organizations has averted a crisis with this arrest, and we will not stop in our efforts to detect, deter, and disrupt anyone else planning to incite or commit violence.”

The Capitol Police in Tallahassee sent out an alert Friday following Baker’s arrest, saying the Florida Department of Law Enforcement is “aware of the information regarding possible protests and violence at state capitols.”

Baker had a first appearance in federal court Friday, appearing on a live feed from a detention facility and wearing an orange jumpsuit with his head shaved. He is charged with transmission, in interstate commerce, of a communication containing a threat to kidnap or to injure. If convicted, he would face a maximum of five years in prison and a $250,000 fine.

He was appointed a federal public defender, with preliminary and detention hearings scheduled Thursday.

The FBI has been aware of Baker’s social media threats since October, according to court documents.

“Recently, however, Baker has been posting messages and multimedia to his Facebook, Instagram, and YouTube accounts that have been increasingly ripe with extremist rhetoric,” the complaint said.

Baker served in the military for about a year until 2007. He was a U.S. Army Airborne infantryman, before receiving an “other-than-honorable discharge” for going “AWOL before his unit was to deploy to Iraq,” the U.S. Attorney’s office said. He experienced a nine-year period of homelessness after being discharged, authorities said, before joining a group fighting in Syria against ISIS and the Turkish government.

Copyright 2021 WFSU. To see more, visit WFSU.

News Service of Florida