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FBI captures suspect in infamous Jan. 6 pipe bomb mystery after nearly five years

For years, investigators chased dead ends across the nation while offering an extraordinary 500,000 dollar reward to anyone who could identify the elusive bomber.

By Jewish Breaking News

In a stunning break in a cold case, the FBI on Thursday morning arrested a long-sought suspect believed to have planted the notorious pipe bombs outside the Republican and Democratic national headquarters on the eve of the January 6 Capitol riot.

The case has haunted federal investigators and gripped the nation for nearly five years.

Federal officials are calling the arrest a major breakthrough in one of the most chilling unsolved mysteries tied to January 6.

The bombs never detonated, but their placement just steps from the political nerve center of Washington sent shockwaves through the capital and raised terrifying questions about how close the country came to a mass casualty attack.

The suspect was identified as Brian J. Cole Jr., a 30-year-old from Woodbridge, Virginia, and is charged with placing both explosive devices near the party’s headquarters in Washington.

For years, investigators chased dead ends across the nation while offering an extraordinary 500,000 dollar reward to anyone who could identify the elusive bomber.

Surveillance footage shows a masked figure calmly planting the first device outside the Democratic National Committee at 7:54 p.m. on January 5, 2021, before moving across the city to place a second bomb outside the Republican National Committee about 22 minutes later.

Wearing a gray hoodie, black gloves, and a face mask, the individual instantly became one of the most mysterious fugitives in modern American history.

The investigation roared back to life under FBI leaders Dan Bongino and Director Kash Patel, who pledged to crack the case even as they openly criticized the bureau’s broader handling of January 6 and even as President Trump issued sweeping day-one pardons to rioters, including those who violently attacked police with poles and improvised weapons.

In a lengthy post on X last month, Bongino announced that the FBI had brought in new agents, reopened long-dormant leads, and dramatically increased investigative resources.

He highlighted the expanded reward as a crucial tool to spark a new wave of crowdsourced tips.

Today, after years of frustration and national speculation, those efforts have finally paid off. One of the last major mysteries of January 6 may finally be on the brink of unraveling.

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Published by
Yossi Licht
Tags: Jan. 6 riots Pipe bomb Washington DC

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