Tucker Carlson and Darren Beattie allege US government planted pipe bombs night before Capitol riots

By Charlie Sawyer

Published Jan 29, 2024 at 04:41 PM

Reading time: 2 minutes

54262

If you thought that we were done with all of the rumours and conspiracy theories surrounding the 6 January Capitol riots, you’d be wrong. While it’s been over three years since the insurgence dominated headlines and had us all perpetually glued to our Twitter feeds, there appears to be a pretty wild update about a set of pipe bombs connected to a mysterious individual no one can seem to identify.

According to CBS News, the individual who investigators say left two pipe bombs outside the headquarters of the Democratic and Republican parties in Washington, DC the night before the 6 January attack is still on the loose. Moreover, the FBI is offering a $500,000 reward for information that may lead to the arrest of the person responsible.

Despite having access to CCTV footage and a widespread public campaign urging people to try and identify the assailant, authorities have had no luck in hunting down the suspect. All they do know is that the unknown individual wore Nike Air Max Speed turf shoes, a face mask, glasses, gloves and a grey hooded sweatshirt.

While the pipe bombs did not detonate, the FBI insisted that they had posed a “viable” danger to the public. In fact, Vice President Kamala Harris was evacuated from the Democratic National Convention (DNC) headquarters when the devices were recovered.

So, what’s the most recent update? Has the mystery individual been caught? No, instead, conspiracy theorists have decided to push the narrative that it was in fact government officials who planted the pipe bombs, all in a bid to stop Donald Trump from taking his “rightful” place as the President of the United States.

How did the pipe bomb rumours start?

It all began when Trump-ally and right-wing conservative Darren Beattie was removed from his position in the US Commission for the Preservation of America’s Heritage Abroad agency. According to Insider, his firing came after it was revealed that Beattie was continuing to occupy a position in the federal government given to him by Donald Trump, almost a year since Joe Biden took office and gained the ability to fire him.

Beattie’s appointment in 2020 caused outrage and since then multiple campaign groups have continued to call for his removal. In a statement to Insider, the Anti-Defamation League, which monitors anti-Semitism, said that Beattie should not be continuing to serve on the body. One of its spokesmen stated: “Since Beattie’s appointment to the Commission in November 2020, he has continued to spread outrageous and deeply harmful falsehoods and misinformation, including about the 6 January insurrection, that are at odds with serving in such positions of official responsibility.”

Clearly unfazed by his firing, Beattie posted this in response:

Since Trump left the White House, Beattie has only become more aggressive with his conspiracy theories and he debuted his most recent one, the one that pertains to the pipe bombs, on none other than Tucker Carlson’s show.

Carlson is of course an American conservative commentator who was infamously dismissed from Fox News in April 2023. Now, hosting his own show on X, Carlson spoke with Beattie about the pipebomb theory on 18 January 2024. During his appearance, Beattie stuck with the narrative that the bombs had to of been planted by insiders, a notion Carlson was clearly very taken with.

To say that Beattie’s evidence for this being an inside job is far-fetched, would be too kind. However, this conversation does prove how so many individuals, to this day, are still fixated on the conspiracy theories surrounding 6 January 2021.

The FBI has not released any other information on the case.

Keep On Reading

By Fatou Ferraro Mboup

QAnon conspiracy theorists claim Iowa shooting was a political coverup for Jeffrey Epstein scandal

By Abby Amoakuh

Inside Mark Zuckerberg’s secret Hawaiian apocalypse bunker and the doomsday conspiracy behind it

By Fatou Ferraro Mboup

Could the next pope be Black? Peter Turkson’s papal bid could rewrite over 1,500 years of Vatican history

By Alma Fabiani

Amazon Music is giving away 4 months free. Here’s how to claim it

By Eliza Frost

The Summer I Turned Pretty’s Chris Briney is at the centre of a new love triangle, but this time for an audio erotica story 

By Eliza Frost

Taylor Swift’s Release Party of a Showgirl is coming to cinemas everywhere, and it’s already made $15M

By Fatou Ferraro Mboup

James Toback hit with landmark $1.68 billion jury award after 40 women accused director of sexual abuse

By Eliza Frost

Why is Taylor not Team Conrad in The Summer I Turned Pretty?

By Eliza Frost

Zayn Malik’s new song suggests One Direction era wasn’t all sunshine and rainbows

By Fatou Ferraro Mboup

How incel TikTok accounts are rebranding to avoid getting banned

By Charlie Sawyer

Odd Muse founder Aimee Smale fights back against fast fashion controversy on TikTok

By Eliza Frost

All the Easter eggs from the first episodes of The Summer I Turned Pretty season 3

By Eliza Frost

Does the SKIMS Face Wrap actually work, or is it just another TikTok trap?

By Eliza Frost

It now takes 20 hours of work a week to survive as a UK university student

By Eliza Frost

The Summer I Turned Pretty stars Lola Tung and Gavin Casalegno caught in political drama

By Charlie Sawyer

President Trump and JD Vance angry over the DNC setting up a taco truck outside RNC headquarters

By Charlie Sawyer

Brooklyn Beckham and Nicola Peltz Beckham hire a lawyer to battle misinformation amid growing family rift

By Charlie Sawyer

Did Tim Cheese murder John Pork, and how is Simon Claw involved? The lore, explained

By Eliza Frost

Misogyny, sexism, and the manosphere: how this year’s Love Island UK has taken a step backwards

By Charlie Sawyer

What is ketamine therapy, the psychiatric treatment healing famous Mormons Jen and Zac Affleck’s marriage?