Community Corner
Oath Keepers’ Leader Wanted To ‘Storm The Capitol In Ohio,’ Feds Say
Authorities charged a leader of the Oath Keepers and two members from Ohio for their role in breaching the U.S. Capitol Jan. 6 as Congre ...

Authorities charged a leader of the Oath Keepers and two members from Ohio for their role in breaching the U.S. Capitol Jan. 6 as Congress was voting to certify the results of the 2020 presidential election.
Jessica Watkins, 38, and Donovan Crowl, 49, both of Champaign County, are facing federal charges of entering restricted grounds, violent entry, and obstruction of a congressional proceeding.
Find out what's happening in Across Ohiofor free with the latest updates from Patch.
Thomas Caldwell, 65, who the feds say has a leadership role in the collective of several unregulated ‘militia’ groups known as the Oath Keepers, was charged with the same counts, along with conspiracy to commit an offense.
The two Ohioans are dues-paying Oath Keeper members, according to an interview with Watkins, another outlet’s interview with Crowl, and the federal allegations.
Find out what's happening in Across Ohiofor free with the latest updates from Patch.
Oath Keepers are predominantly former armed forces members (including Crowl and Watkins) and law enforcement who believe the government is stripping freedoms away from Americans. Members have been convicted of several acts of violence and weapons charges, even before the Jan. 6 raid on Congress, which left five people dead including a U.S. Capitol Police officer and an insurrectionist shot by police.
The Ohio State Regular Militia, before storming the U.S. capitol, appeared at the Ohio Statehouse in November after networks first projected Joe Biden won the election to “protect people,” according to Watkins, seen on the right. Donovan Crowl stands second from the right. Both declined to give their names at the time.
On Tuesday, authorities arrested Thomas Caldwell, who the feds say has a “leadership role” with the Oath Keepers, in connection with the raid. In an affidavit, an FBI agent cited information from an unidentified witness stating that on Jan. 14, the day the Ohio Capital Journal first identified Watkins at the raid, she left Ohio to stay with Caldwell in Virginia.
Caldwell was involved in planning and coordinating the Jan. 6 breach of the Capitol, federal officials allege. Charging documents cite Facebook messages sent to an unidentified recipient of Caldwell boasting about being an “instigator” and how the doors were “breached.”
“We need to do this at the local level,” he allegedly said. “Lets [sic] storm the capitol in Ohio. Tell me when!”
Caldwell could not be reached for comment via a phone number contained in his charging documents.
At least 50 officers were injured during the course of events Jan. 6. Officials located pipe bombs at Republican and Democratic party headquarters near the Capitol, along with Molotov cocktails and other weapons on the Capitol grounds.
Watkins, in an interview before her arrest, acknowledged entering the Capitol amid the mob. She said she did not destroy any property inside or fight with any law enforcement officers.
“To me, it was the most beautiful thing I ever saw until we started hearing glass smash,” she said. “That’s when we knew things had gotten really bad.”
Crowl, speaking to The New Yorker, made similar remarks.
Footage of the Jan. 6 raid reported by this outlet and later cited by federal prosecutors shows a train of Oath Keepers, including Crowl and Watkins, slicing through a crowd and up the stairs to the U.S. Capitol, where Congress was convened.
A still from footage of the riots in Washington D.C. captures Jessica Watkins, 38, seen with several people in Oathkeepers regalia, heading up the Capitol stairs. Screenshot from YouTube, credit Ford Fischer / News2Share.
Radio communications through the Zello walkie-talkie app, intercepted by reporters and published in The Guardian, captured Watkins and other militia members communicating in real time as they enter the building.
“We’ve got a good group, there’s about 30, 40 of us,” she said. “We’re sticking together and sticking to the plan.”
Her last communication via Zello is candid.
“We are in the mezzanine, we are in the main building right now, we are rocking it,” she said. “They’re throwing grenades, they’re shooting people with paintballs, but we’re in here.”
Footage posted to Parler, an alternative social media site favored by conservatives, and obtained by ProPublica depicts Crowl and Watkins inside the building.
“Look who took over the Capitol, over ran the Capitol,” Crowl, clad in a tactical vest, combat fatigues, and a helmet with goggles perched on top of it.
“We’re in the f***ing Capitol bro,” Watkins, similarly dressed, says to the camera.
HELP US GROW
Make a tax-deductible donation.
This story was originally published by the Ohio Capital Journal. For more stories from the Ohio Capital Journal, visit OhioCapitalJournal.com.