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The Epoch Times
The Epoch Times
1 Mar 2023


NextImg:Attorney Suggests 'Pink Beret' Lured Defendant Into Capitol on Jan. 6 so He Could Be Charged

A potential femme fatale who wore a bright pink beret, expensive clothing, and high heels on Jan. 6 might have been a government cooperator who lured a Washington man into the U.S. Capitol, a court filing suggests.

In a motion filed with U.S. District Judge John Bates, defense attorney Kira Anne West said she needs to identify the woman known on social media as #PinkBeret to fully defend her client, Darrell Neely.

“Long before she was spotted walking into the Capitol hand in hand with Mr. Neely on Jan. 6 … Pink Beret had been making a fashion statement all over the Capitol grounds,” West wrote in her filing.

Pink Beret was spotted on open-source videos near the site of the first breach of a police barrier at about 12:50 p.m.

She sprinted across the west lawn wearing high heels “to get to the Capitol as quickly as possible and to be the first one to get there,” West wrote.

Pink Beret uses a broken stick to direct protesters into the Capitol from the Upper West Terrace on Jan. 6, 2021, an attorney contends. (U.S. District Court/Screenshot via The Epoch Times)

“Like Ray Epps, #PinkBeret pushed through the first gates at the Peace Circle,” Jan. 6 defendant Will Pope wrote on Twitter.

“She then grabbed a random man’s hand [defendant Darrell Neely] and walked him into the building. Another video shows her repeatedly waving the crowd into the Capitol.”

Attorney West’s motion stated that Pink Beret was seen elsewhere outside and inside the Capitol, alone and with other individuals. On the Upper West Terrace, she stood atop a small staircase “directing people like [conductor Arturo] Toscanini into the Capitol,” West said.

“Mr. Neely’s entry into the Capitol was directed by Pink Beret,” West said. “She had associates in the building that day and seemed to have information well beyond that of a normal citizen there to protest.

“Mr. Neely needs to know who she is and why she was there,” West said. “He also needs to understand if he was targeted by her that day and for what purpose.”

Pink Beret is listed on the Sedition Hunters website, but she is not listed as a wanted person on the FBI’s Jan. 6 page. She has not been arrested or charged.

Neely was charged in a superseding indictment on Oct. 12, 2022, with six federal crimes: obstruction of a law enforcement officer during a civil disorder; theft of government property with less than $1,000 value; entering and remaining in a restricted building or grounds; disorderly and disruptive conduct in a restricted building or grounds; disorderly and disruptive conduct to obstruct Congress; and parading, demonstrating or picketing in a Capitol building.

Despite requests to the Department of Justice to identify Pink Beret, prosecutors declined, West wrote.

“To date, the government has not definitively stated that Pink Beret is not a government agent or cooperator—only that they have no knowledge of that as of now,” West wrote.

“As seen on open source videos and photographs, Pink Beret was an aggressive actor and was photographed and videotaped all over the grounds. She was easily identifiable.”

West said she provided a possible identification to federal prosecutors.

Pink Beret “getting cozy with a male protester” at the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, according to defense attorney Kira West. (U.S. District Court/Screenshot via The Epoch Times)

“With respect to the girl in the beret, we decline to provide information about ongoing investigations,” DOJ trial attorney Joseph McFarlane wrote to West on Aug. 12, 2022.

West questioned if Pink Beret is connected to—or in fact is—Erika Flores, an alleged paramour of former Proud Boys chairman Enrique Tarrio, who is on trial in Washington for alleged seditious conspiracy and other charges.

Court records in the Proud Boys trial tie Flores to “1776 Returns,” a key document that federal prosecutors contend is a blueprint for the Proud Boys to attack the Capitol on Jan. 6.

That document was messaged to Tarrio. However, defense attorneys say there is no evidence he opened, read, or forwarded it.

“At this point in time, Mr. Neely is seeking to identify this crucial witness in his case,” West wrote.

“The government has been withholding discovery on the identity of this important witness who would be able to testify that Mr. Neely did not steal anything while inside the Capitol and that the police items were returned to the officer in the Crypt.”

According to the defense motion, while in the Crypt Pink Beret collected items belonging to a police officer and stuffed them in a backpack. Neely took the backpack from her and returned it to an officer standing nearby.

When the pair entered the Capitol Visitors Center, Pink Beret began acting strangely, West wrote.

“Pink Beret immediately turns around when Neely isn’t looking and runs to the escalator shaft,” West wrote. “She ducks down and removes her beret and continues up the escalator in a crouched position.

“During the course of their interactions, Pink Beret made statements to Mr. Neely that indicated that she knew a lot of people at the Capitol that day,” West wrote.

“That seems odd, as almost all day she is solo until she attaches herself to Neely to enter the building. Why befriend a stranger only to mysteriously ditch him?”

Pink Beret exited the Capitol at 2:43 p.m. through the Senate Wing Door, not wearing the beret and with a cloth hiding her face, West wrote.

Six minutes later, she entered the Upper West Terrace entrance, where she got “cozy with a male protester” before making “a beeline to the office across the hall.”