
Jeremy Bertino was testifying at the trial of former Proud Boys leader Henry “Enrique” Tarrio and four other members of the organisation that, in the days leading up to the riot at the Capitol on January 6 in 2021, the group increasingly believed they would have to take action to stop Trump’s defeat to Democrat Joe Biden.
“My belief was that we had to take the reins and pretty much be the leaders that we had been building ourselves up to be,” the 43-year-old said.
He was not present at the Capitol the day of the riot after he was injured in a stabbing in Washington, D.C., in December 2020.
Bertino, of Belmont in North Carolina, pleaded guilty last year to seditious conspiracy charges. As part of his plea deal, he agreed to cooperate with the government.
The jury on Wednesday was shown messages in which Bertino encouraged Proud Boys at the Capitol to keep pressing and “form a sphere” to advance further on the grounds.

“You know we made this happen,” Bertino wrote in one message to Tarrio.
“I know,” Tarrio replied.
Bertino said that after authorities regained control of the Capitol and Congress reconvened, his view of the riot changed. He began to see it as a "failure" and a "complete waste of time."
Tarrio and four other Proud Boys members - Dominic Pezzola, Ethan Nordean, Joseph Biggs and Zachary Rehl - have been on trial on seditious conspiracy charges for what prosecutors allege was their plan to use violence to stop the transfer of presidential power.
Defence lawyers have argued that there was no plan to storm the Capitol and that prosecutors have taken private messages out of context to suggest that there was a broad conspiracy.
Bertino testified that after the December stabbing, which he said left him with broken ribs and a punctured lung, he and other Proud Boys grew disillusioned and began to question their support of law enforcement.
“At this point, things had changed and we weren’t on their side anymore,” Bertino said.
The Proud Boys case marks the third seditious conspiracy trial to arise from the Capitol riot.
In two previous trials, several members of the far-right Oath Keepers, including founder Stewart Rhodes, were convicted of seditious conspiracy.











