Advertisement

The FBI raided her home to find Nancy Pelosi’s laptop. But was she the wrong woman?

Rioters outside doors of U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6
U.S. Capitol Police try to hold back rioters outside the east doors to the House side of the Capitol on Jan. 6.
(Andrew Harnik / Associated Press)
Share via

“We’re looking for Nancy Pelosi’s laptop,” FBI agents told Marilyn Hueper after briefly handcuffing her.

Hueper shot back: “That still doesn’t explain why you’re in my home. Or in Homer, Alaska.”

The search for the House speaker’s laptop had taken a U.S. Capitol Police officer thousands of miles from home for an FBI raid on Hueper’s home, looking for something stolen during the Jan. 6 insurrection — and the person who did it.

The agents walked out of Hueper’s home April 28 with iPads, cellphones and a pocket-sized copy of the Declaration of Independence. They took a laptop, but it wasn’t from Pelosi’s office. And it’s possible they may have the wrong person altogether — even though Hueper looks strikingly similar to the thief.

Advertisement

The Justice Department’s massive prosecution of those who stormed the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6 has not been without its problems, including this potential instance of mistaken identity. And as Republicans increasingly seek to minimize the insurrection and play down the horror of the day, any missteps by federal prosecutors could be used in that effort.

Federal prosecutors have charged more than 400 people, the largest undertaking by the department, including scores of defendants who posted images of their actions online and boasted about breaking into the hallowed building. Some are facing serious charges and considerable prison time.

A judge has freed a Pennsylvania woman jailed on suspicion of helping steal a laptop from the office of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi.

Hueper and her husband first came to officials’ attention this year when Alaska Airlines in February banned the couple for refusing to wear masks on a flight, according to court documents obtained by the Associated Press. Two other people then called in tips saying they recognized Hueper in photos that authorities had released of suspects wanted in the storming of the Capitol.

Advertisement

The insurrectionists sought to disrupt the certification of President Biden’s victory. Hundreds of officers were injured and five people died after the riot, including a Capitol Police officer.

Supporters of then-President Trump ransacked offices, rifled through lawmakers’ papers and desks, smashed through glass, shattered windows and tore down signs. Among the items stolen: the laptop from Pelosi’s office, her lectern, an iPad belonging to Majority Whip Rep. Jim Clyburn (D-S.C.) and other electronics.

But the volume of people inside the Capitol building, along with the lack of arrests made at the time of the riot, has made it difficult to identify people, even with the glut of social media evidence. Federal agents have dug through thousands of social media posts, gotten sweeping warrants to obtain information on cellphones in the area of the Capitol, used facial recognition tools and obtained logs of devices that signed into the congressional Wi-Fi during the riot.

Advertisement

I was working at the Capitol when the Trump D.C. riots hit.

By far the most effective tool for federal agents has been old-fashioned tips. Many of the rioters have been turned in by their friends and family members.

The warrant for Hueper’s arrest, obtained by the AP, identifies her as the woman who took the laptop.

But they’re wrong, Hueper insists. She told the AP that another woman wearing the same kind of coat and a similar hairstyle was inside the Capitol during the riot, not her. She admits she was in Washington for Trump’s rally that day but says she didn’t get any closer than 100 yards from the Capitol and spent part of the day lost in an unfamiliar city.

She said agents showed her one photo of the woman inside the Capitol, and they looked so similar that Hueper wondered if someone had used photo-editing software to put her in the photograph.

Trump supporters gather in the U.S. capital to protest the ratification of President-elect Joe Biden’s electoral college victory over President Trump.

The warrant details how FBI agents located an image showing Hueper wearing similar clothing in a photo on her husband’s Instagram account. It said Hueper’s husband had also posted photos of them near the Capitol. “BEST OF 2020,” he wrote in one, showing her from behind nearing the building. “Marilyn approaching the Capital. As Patriots, there is a righteous revolution to take back our country ... To be there was a once-in-a-lifetime experience. STOP THE STEAL!”

Hueper said an agent came back with a different and larger photo of the woman, which showed the suspected thief wearing a black sweater with large white snowflakes on it. The agent asked where in the house they could locate the sweater.

Advertisement

Hueper said she reiterated she wasn’t inside the building. “No. 2, why didn’t you show me this photo to start with? Because we can both obviously see here this is a different person.”

Plus, she said, the sweater was hideous.

Hueper said she grabbed the photo and held it next to her face, asking the female agent to look at both closely, “Me. Her. Me. Her,” she told the agent. Hueper said the agent took the paper back and walked off.

Both Hueper and the woman in the photo were wearing black Columbia down coats. However, in a photo posted on her husband’s Facebook page from Jan. 6, Hueper is shown wearing a black face mask, a green blouse open at the collar and a light green scarf. The surveillance video released by the FBI shows the suspected thief wearing the black sweater with the snowflake print and dangling earrings. Also, the woman in the photo has detached earlobes, while Hueper says hers are attached.

After insisting, Hueper was shown the front page of the warrant but not allowed to thoroughly read the document, she said. She read it only after receiving a copy as the dozen or so agents and Capitol Police officer left.

According to the search warrants, agents could collect any electronics that might be suspected to have been involved, items stolen from the Capitol, a laptop with descriptors and a serial number — “which they didn’t find,” she said — and any paperwork related to planning violence.

Two brothers from the L.A. area are accused of entering U.S. Capitol through a window during the Jan. 6 riot

Hueper said she has not heard back from federal authorities, nor have agents returned her laptop, two iPads, two cellphones or the 50-cent pocket-sized Declaration of Independence booklet they confiscated April 28.

She has not been arrested. Justice Department officials would say only that the investigation is ongoing.

Advertisement

But she decided to go public with her story, just in case.

“I better go online and protect myself before they call me in and make me this person,” she said.

Advertisement