Crime & Safety
Keene Man Charged For Capitol Break-In During Riot
Jason Riddle, a man who gave multiple media interviews after he was part of the Jan. 6 break-in at the U.S. Capitol, was charged Friday.

KEENE, NH β Jason Riddle, a Keene man who gave multiple media interviews after he was part of the Jan. 6 break-in at the U.S. Capitol was charged Friday in the United States District Court in Washington, D.C.
Riddle, 32, is seen in photos and videos shared online in social media and traditional media, inside the U.S. Capitol as rioters were breaking in and people in military garb were reportedly looking to kill members of Congress and Vice President Mike Pence, according to court documents.
Find out what's happening in Amherstfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
Riddle, who is seen taking a bottle of wine and who allegedly stole a Senate procedure manual and sold it on eBay for $40, is charged with the federal counts of knowingly entering or remaining in any restricted building or grounds without lawful authority, theft of government property, and violent entry and disorderly conduct on capitol grounds.
FBI Special Agent Kevin Helson cites Riddleβs first interview with an NBC outlet in which Riddle admitted to going into the Capitol building along with the rioters.
Find out what's happening in Amherstfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
βI just, I just had to see it,β Riddle said in the interview.
βWhen asked (by the NBC reporter) if Riddle regretted it, Riddle responded, βNo,ββ Helson writes in his affidavit.
Riddle is also quoted by NBC as saying he βpoured a glass of wine and watched it all unfold,β while in the building and watching the violence.
βThey were smashing computers, and printers, and breaking things, and throwing papers and lamps around,β Riddle said in the NBC interview, according to Helsonβs affidavit.

Photo of Jason Riddle outside the U.S. Capitol Jan. 6 from court filing.
Riddle supplied reporters with video and photos he took of the action inside the building, including numerous videos and photos of himself. Many of the photos of Riddle are included in Helsonβs affidavit, along with surveillance security images taken from the Capitol complex system.
The charges were first reported Friday by the Keene Sentinel, where Riddle was previously interviewed.
Helson writes that FBI agents interviewed Riddle in Keene on Jan. 22 when executing a search warrant to obtain digital photos and video. During that interview, Riddle allegedly admitted to going in as part of a βbreak inβ led by a βbig dude.β Riddle also admitted to taking the Senate book and drinking the wine, according to Helson.
βRiddle also admitted that he stole a small Fox News football from the same office, but tossed it aside as he exited the Capitol building,β Helson wrote.

Photo from court filing.
Riddle told the agents that before they arrived he had tried to delete photos from his phone.
βRiddle also admitted that at some point after the Capitol incident, he had deleted some messages, photos, and videos of his D.C. trip from his phone, during what he termed a βdelete frenzy,ββ Helson wrote.
Riddle has yet to appear in court in Washington D.C. to be arraigned on the charges. He denounced the violence of the riots in his media interviews. He is a former corrections officer who ran unsuccessfully for Cheshire County Commissioner as a Republican, according to the Keene Sentinel.
Riddle is now the second New Hampshire person charged for his role in the Jan. 6 riots. Last month, Thomas Gallagher, 61, of Bridgewater was arrested and charged for being part of a disorderly group inside the Capitol building.
Troy Police Chief David Ellis caused a controversy when he was interviewed as being at the protest that took place ahead of the riot on Jan. 6.
Ellis talked to a reporter and denounced the violence against police officers perpetrated by the rioters. Five people were killed in the violence, including a police officer.
This story was originally published by InDepth NH.