Dec 04, 2025
For the first time in nearly five years, there is now a name linked to the bombs planted near both the Republican and Democratic national party headquarters in Washington, D.C., on the eve of the Jan. 6 attack at the U.S. Capitol. On Thursday, Brian Cole Jr., 30, was arrested and charged in c onnection with the explosives, which did not detonate. He’s accused of transporting an explosive device and attempted malicious destruction by means of explosive materials, according to charging documents. While federal officials offered some details in court documents on how authorities came to zero in on Cole as a suspect, it is not clear if they have determined a motive or whether the bombs, which were planted on Jan. 5, 2021, had any connection to the Jan. 6 Capitol riot, when thousands of supporters of President Donald Trump overtook the building in attempt to halt the certification of Joe Biden’s election victory. The suspect lives just outside of D.C. Brian J. Cole Jr. lives in a single-family house in Woodbridge, Virginia, a Washington, D.C., suburb about 25 miles southwest of Capitol Hill, with his mother and other family members, according to the affidavit. One of Cole’s neighbors said Thursday that he was shocked to learn that the suspect resided on the same block. “Nothing ever happens here,” the neighbor said. “It’s like Sleepytown.” Cole works in the office of a bail bondsman in northern Virginia, the charging document states. Cole’s father, Brian Cole Sr., owns a bail bondsman business in northern Virginia. It is not clear if it is the business where the suspect works, and his father declined to comment Thursday. Cole graduated from Hylton High School in Virginia in 2013, according to a spokesperson for the Prince William County Public Schools. Spokesperson Diana Gulotta declined to comment further. Public records do not list Cole’s party affiliation. It is not clear if Cole has a lawyer. He allegedly bought materials consistent with bombs In court documents filed Thursday, prosecutors alleged that throughout 2019 and 2020, Cole purchased items consistent with the components used to manufacture the pipe bombs placed at the RNC and DNC. Federal officials allege that he continued to buy materials even after the bombs were placed on Jan. 5. The charging documents state that he bought galvanized pipes; end caps; battery connectors; kitchen timers; electrical wire and steel wool from retailers, including Home Depot and Walmart, to make the explosives. Cole also purchased safety glasses, sandpaper, protective gloves and disinfecting wipes in the months leading up to the attack on the Capitol, according to the affidavit. Washington DC 12 hours ago FBI descends on D.C. pipe bomb suspect's Virginia home almost 5 years after Jan. 6 siege Washington DC 7 hours ago DOJ announces arrest of suspect who placed pipe bombs in D.C. on eve of Jan. 6 Cellphone tower data pointed to the suspect The affidavit states that the FBI also connected Cole to the incident through cellphone tower data. His phone pinged off cellphone towers in the area of the parties’ headquarters, according to the government. Cole’s cellphone engaged in approximately seven data session transactions with the area’s cellphone towers between 7:39 p.m. and 8:24 p.m. on Jan. 5, according to the affidavit. Authorities also used a license plate reader to place Cole in the area around the time the pipe bombs were placed, according to the charging documents. The affidavit said Cole’s 2017 Nissan Sentra “was observed driving past a License Plate Reader at the South Capitol Street exit from Interstate 395 South, which is less than one-half mile from the location where the individual who placed the devices was first observed on foot.” “For all of the reasons stated above, there is probable cause that, on January 5, 2021, COLE placed pipe bombs outside of the RNC and the DNC,” the affidavit reads. FBI arrived in quiet neighborhood A neighbor who lives two houses down from the suspect’s home said he was working around 8:30 a.m. when he heard sirens and went to see what the commotion was. There were two vehicles that resembled Humvees outside, he said. “And on the loudspeaker they were saying, ‘This is the FBI. We have a federal search warrant’ and they were telling everyone to come out of the house with their hands up,” the neighbor said. Two people came out, but no one was handcuffed, said the neighbor, who did not want his name used. “They had maybe eight to 10 people in camouflage and full tactical gear, automatic rifles, all aimed at the house,” the neighbor said. “And they kind of slowly — just like in an action movie, they made their way in by formation and all went into the house.” The neighbor said he recognized the man identified by authorities as the suspect but never spoke to him. The neighborhood is quiet, he said, where “everybody sort of knows everybody.” The man identified by authorities as the suspect would often be walking his chihuahua and seemed to keep to himself, the neighbor said. “Just not somebody that I would pick as somebody who’d want to hurt anyone for any reason,” the neighbor said. “Just seemed to be a quiet guy who enjoyed walking his dog and kept to himself.” Rich Schapiro and Doha Madani contributed. ...read more read less
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