According to the arrest warrant, Wagner was first identified as a suspected person, which created a non -specific “investigating superiority by law enforcement by evidence of scene.” Investigators claim that after analyzing CCTV footage from buildings near the Republican Office and Traffic cameras, they identified a car registered in Wagner. After reviewing Wagner’s driver’s license and physical surveillance outside his home, investigators are also convinced that he resembles a person who is visible to the Tesla Showroom’s surveillance footage.
The arrest warrant claims that after the search warrant was implemented at Wagner’s house, investigators found red spray paint, provocative liquids “according to petrol” and Jars found according to the evidence that was set on fire at the Tesla Showroom Fire and the Republican Office. He also found a paint stinnic cutout according to “Ice = KK” according to the graphy found in the Republican Office, and clothes that the suspect was seen wearing on footage outside the Tesla Showroom.
According to the arrest warrant, the Bureau of Alcohol, tobacco, firearms and explosives have tested “fire debraces”, fingerprints, and potential DNA at the scene, but no results have been presented in the warrant, which has yet been reported.
Currently five other people who are facing federal charges for damaging Tesla property include 42 -year -old Lucy Grace Nelson Colorado, 41 -year -old Adam Matthew Lansky Oregon, 24 -year -old Daniel Clark Ponder South Carolina, 24 -year -old Cooper Joe Frederick Colorado, and 36 years old Paul Haven less Of Nevada
FBI’s Joint Terror Task Force Investigating the incident, which led to a few people being charged on April 9. However, press release and judicial filing suggest that the task force was not deployed in the other four investigations.
This story originally appeared Wired dot.