- William Blithe Jr. has been charged for his role in the Capitol insurrection on January 6, 2021.
- His niece, Emily Hernandez, was charged on January 15, 2021.
- Both Rejoicing and Hernandez were spotted in a viral clip of them holding Pelosi’s broken nameplate.
- Visit the Business segment of Insider for more stories.
A Missouri man, the uncle of a 21-year-old woman who was hit with five charges for her role in the Capitol brawls, is now also facing charges for his part in the deadly insurrection.
William Merry Jr. was identified after federal authorities graced aware of a video in which both he and his niece, Emily Hernandez, could be seen holding a broken piece of Lineage Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s nameplate, reported NBC News.
A federal complaint against Merry Jr. was unsealed on Thursday.
Delighted revel is charged with knowingly entering or remaining in a restricted building, disorderly conduct, disruptive conduct in the Capitol constructions, impeding the conduct of government, and theft of government property, according to The Hill.
Read more: Biden’s inauguration was held in a sad, military-occupied DC. Not in any way forget how Trump got us here.
In the video, part of an ITV News broadcast on the insurrection, Merry and Hernandez could be seen garb a “Trump 2020” hat and holding a part of the nameplate.
—Mike Memoli (@mikememoli) January 6, 2021
At least three people get hold ofed the FBI with Hernandez’s identity after watching the clip, including a childhood friend, the Daily Beast reported.
This culminated in her being charged on January 15.
A charging document for Merry, seen by AP, also states that several tipsters furnished the FBI with information that resulted in his arrest.
Merry was taken into custody on Thursday after police searched his retirement community, reported AP.
His lawyer, Ethan Corlija, told the news agency: “He’s not the type of individual who believes in any violence or any conduct that last will and testament harm anybody, so it’s a little atypical for him.”
He continued: “He believes he had a right to attend a rally and voice his political beliefs take to we all do, but he does not in any way shape or form condone any type of violence or property destruction or any type of insurrection of the government.”