Who is Enrique Tarrio? Ex-Proud Boys leader faces longest prison sentence yet for January 6
The former leader of the neo-fascist gang was sentenced to 22 years in prison
Two days before a mob of Donald Trumpās supporters stormed the US Capitol, the now-former leader of a neo-fascist gang was arrested in Washington DC shortly after stepping off a plane from Miami.
Enrique Tarrio was wanted by police after he admitted to tearing down and burning a Black Lives Matter flag outside a historically Black church in the nationās capital during December riots connected to a protest supporting then-President Donald Trumpās false claims that the 2020 presidential election was stolen from him.
On 6 January, 2021, Tarrio watched the insurrection unfold from a hotel in Baltimore.
Before his arrest two days earlier, Tarrio wrote to his lieutenant: āWhatever happens ā¦ make it a spectacle.ā
Tarrio is now among four members of the self-described āWestern chauvinistā gang facing decades in prison after they were found guilty in May of seditious conspiracy and other charges in connection with the mobās assault. He was sentenced to 22 years in prison, the longest sentence to date in connection with the attack.
In a sentencing memo, prosecutors said the men āorganized and directed a force of nearly 200 to attack the heart of our democracyā and āintentionally positioned themselves at the vanguard of political violence in this country.ā
āThe defendants understood the stakes, and they embraced their role in bringing about a ārevolution.ā They unleashed a force on the Capitol that was calculated to exert their political will on elected officials by force and to undo the results of a democratic election,ā prosecutors wrote. āThey failed. They are not heroes; they are criminals.ā
During the trial, prosecutors presented hundreds of internal messages revealing the groupās toxic rhetoric and culture of violence depicting a gang āthat came together to use force against its enemiesā in the weeks leading up to January 6, according to prosecutors.
Prosecutors argued that the Proud Boys were not merely obedient followers of the former presidentās commands but were preparing for āall-out warā to undermine millions of Americansā votes and upend a democratic election to preserve his presidency.
Tarrio, as the leader of the gang, along with his four co-defendants, ādirected, mobilized and ledā a crowd of 200 supporters towards the Capitol on January 6, āleading to dismantling of metal barricades, destruction of property, breaching of the Capitol building, and assaults on law enforcement,ā then bragged about their actions on social media and in group chat messages that were later shared with jurors, according to prosecutors.
Defence attorneys have placed the blame on the words and actions of then-President Trump, who directed his supporters to āfight like hellā the morning of the attack and ā in a message from a debate stage heard loud and clear by members of the Proud Boys and their allies ā āstand by.ā
āIt was Donald Trumpās words. It was his motivation,ā Tarrioās attorney Nayib Hassan told jurors in closing arguments. āIt was not Enrique Tarrio. They want to use Enrique Tarrio as a scapegoat for Donald J Trump and those in power.ā

Proud Boys emerged in cities across the US as a violent response to antifascists organizing in the wake of the 2016 election, exploiting white, right-wing male rage and relying on semi-ironic posturing and barroom culture to launder far-right, anti-immigrant and anti-LGBT+ views.
Tarrio, who assumed the role of group āchairmanā in 2018, previously was a āprolificā cooperator with local and federal law enforcement agencies, according to court records and testimony from a former attorney.
His own lawyer and an FBI investigator said Tarrio helped authorities prosecute more than a dozen people in cases involving drugs, gambling and human smuggling between 2012 and 2014. Tarrio has denied his involvement.
Enrique āHenryā Tarrio, 39, was born in Miami to Cuban immigrant parents.
He was initially reluctant to join the Proud Boys until he was courted by members at a party for far-right activist Milo Yiannopoulos in 2017; Tarrio was there working security.
Tarrio rose through the ranks of the burgeoning neo-fascist gang, attending events for Steve Bannon and Sebastian Gorka, rallying alongside members at 2017ās so-called Unite the Right event in Charlottesville, Virginia that exploded into lethal violence, and broadening his Florida chapter into a national operation.
āBefore me ā and they hate it when I say this ā they were the Gavin McInnes fan club,ā he told the Miami New Times. āWe werenāt really political.ā
In 2013, he pleaded guilty to charges stemming from a healthcare fraud case involving diabetic test strips, then assisted federal prosecutors to identify a dozen other suspects, according to court records. He served one year and four months in prison.
During a televised presidential debate on 29 September, 2020, debate moderator Chris Wallace repeatedly asked then-President Trump whether he would denounce white supremacism. Mr Trump asked for a name to reference. Joe Biden, standing on the opposite side of the stage, suggested the Proud Boys.
āProud Boys, stand back and stand by,ā Mr Trump said. āBut Iāll tell you what somebodyās got to do something about antifa and the left because this is not a right-wing problem. This is a left-wing problem.ā
Almost immediately, Proud Boys members and their allies celebrated what they heard as a call to action.
āTrump basically said to go f*** them up!ā Tarrioās future co-defendant Joe Biggs wrote on Parler at the time. āThis makes me so happy.ā
Accounts also circulated a meme illustrating the president wearing a Fred Perry shirt ā a part of the groupās unofficial uniform ā and a peaked cap bearing the Proud Boys logo with the text āstanding by for your orders general, sir.ā
Another image included an incorrect version of the presidentās remarks that more acutely resembled a call to arms: āProud Boys can stand back and stand by, because someone has to take care of antifa and these people.ā
āAlthough I am excited about our mention on the debate stage ā¦ I am not taking this as a direct endorsement from the President,ā Tarrio wrote on Telegram.
āHim telling the Proud Boys to stand back and standby is what we have ALWAYS done,ā he added.
On Parler, Tarrio said: āStanding by, sir.ā
Following Mr Trumpās defeat in the 2020 election, Tarrio and hundreds of members of the Proud Boys and other far-right groups marched through Washington DC, where they set fire to a Black Lives Matter banner seized from historic Black church Asbury United Methodist. The group also attacked Metropolitan African Methodist Episcopal Church, another historic Black church.
During his arrest after his arrival in Washington on 4 January, 2021, police found Tarrio was carrying two high-capacity magazines compatible with high-powered rifles. Both were empty.
He faced a misdemeanor charge of destruction of property for burning the churchās sign and two subsequent felony charges for possessing a high-capacity feeding device.
Tarrio had previously admitted in comments on Parler and on a Proud Boys-affiliated podcast that he was responsible for burning a churchās sign.
āIn the burning of the BLM sign, I was the one that lit it on fire,ā he said. āI was the person that went ahead and put the lighter to it and engulfed it in flames, and I am damn proud that I did.ā
Later that year, he announced he was stepping down from his leadership role with the Proud Boys, as other members āstart getting more involved in local politics, running our guys for office from local seats, whether itās a simple GOP seat or a city council seat.ā
But in the wake of January 6, as the group decentralized, members have harassed drag queen story-telling events at libraries and amplified āgroomerā smears aimed at LGBT+ people.
The group has been central to a wave of attacks and threats against drag performers and the people and venues that host them, according to a recent report from the Institute for Strategic Dialogue. Proud Boys chapters targeted 60 such events, with more than half resulting in physical and verbal clashes, the report found.
In July 2021, as part of a plea agreement dropping the felony charges against him, Tarrio pleaded guilty to destruction of property and to a misdemeanor count of attempted possession of a high-capacity magazine. He was released in January 2022 after serving four months in jail.
Last month, members of the group were ordered to pay $1m over what a Washington DC Superior Court judge called a āhighly orchestratedā and āhateful and overtly racistā assault against the church.

Five months later, a federal grand jury indicted Tarrio and four other men ā Joe Biggs, Ethan Nordean, Dominic Pezzola and Zachary Rehl ā for seditious conspiracy in connection with the Capitol attack.
US District Judge Timothy Kelly barred prosecutors from discussing Tarrioās prior arrest during the Proud Boys trial, but jurors were exposed to dozens of messages revealing membersā hateful rhetoric and calls for violence in private messages and across social media platforms and in public statements ā and in a video showing them burning the Black Lives Matter banner.
In the weeks leading up to January 6, Tarrio had assembled a āMinistry of Self-Defenseā with his co-defendants and Jeremy Bertino, a former Proud Boy who pleaded guilty to seditious conspiracy and served as a key government witness at trial. Bertinoās testimony implicated Tarrio and the other men in a conspiracy to what he said was āanything that was necessary to save the countryā ā including breaking into the Capitol to block the certification of an American election.
Days before the attack, Tarrio exchanged messages with another person who shared a plan called ā1776 Returnsā that included plans to occupy ācrucial buildingsā with āas many people as possible,ā including the House and Senate. That person wrote that ārevolution is [sic] important than anything,ā to which Tarrio replied: āThatās what every waking moment consists of ā¦ Iām not playing games.ā
On January 6, Tarrio told followers on social media that day to ādo what must be doneā and, in a group chat with other Proud Boys members, ādo it again.ā
āMake no mistake,ā he wrote in another message. āWe did this.ā
This story was initially published on 29 August and has been updated with developments