Shelly Stallings aka Shelly Schwartz aka #GreenPlaidLady is joining her husband in a Superseding Indictment, but I doubt they’re going to be seeing much of each other for awhile...
Department of Justice
Shelly Stallings, 42, of Morganfield, Kentucky, is charged with federal offenses that include assaulting, resisting, or impeding certain officers using a dangerous weapon, civil disorder, and entering and remaining in a restricted building or grounds with a deadly or dangerous weapon, among other charges. Stallings was arrested in Owensboro, Kentucky, and will make her initial court appearance today in the Western District of Kentucky.
Stallings and a second individual, Markus Maly, 47, of Fincastle, Virginia, were named as additional defendants in a superseding indictment returned in the District of Columbia in a case that previously included two other defendants: Peter J. Schwartz, 48, who is Stallings’s husband, and Jeffrey Brown, 55, of Santa Ana, California. Maly was arrested on Jan. 26, 2022, and initially charged in a criminal complaint. Schwartz was arrested on Feb. 4, 2021, and Brown was arrested on Aug. 26, 2021. All four defendants are accused of spraying a chemical irritant, pepper spray, at a line of police officers attempting to secure the area of the Lower West Terrace of the Capitol Building. Maly, Schwartz, and Brown previously pleaded not guilty to charges.
The other individual added to the indictment, Markus Maly, was arrested last month...
WSET
Markus Maly, a 47-year-old from Fincastle, Virginia, is charged on suspicion of assaulting, resisting or impeding officers with a deadly weapon or inflicting bodily injury.
Court documents state Maly sprayed a chemical irritant at a line of police officers attempting to secure the area of the Lower West Terrace of the Capitol Building.
He is also accused of handing a second person a can of the chemical irritant spray. That second person, Jeffrey Scott Brown, a 55-year-old from Santa Ana, California, was charged earlier this year with various felonies and is awaiting further court proceedings.
Maly was also allegedly seen exiting a tunnel area with what appears to be a riot shield later that afternoon.
Here they are in action...
Stallings’ husband, Peter J. Schwartz, is a convicted felon who was released from prison due to the pandemic...
Courier Journal
An affidavit says the FBI National Threat Operations Center received a tip Jan. 11 from an individual "who is personally acquainted with Schwartz."
The individual said Schwartz was involved in the riot in Washington, D.C., along with supporters of then-President Donald Trump, and that he was supposed to be at a rehabilitation facility in Owensboro on Jan. 6.
The person said Schwartz is a traveling welder and convicted felon who was released from prison due to COVID-19, per the affidavit from a special agent with the FBI.
(snip)
FBI agents identified Schwartz in an Action 8 News video of the riot that was posted Jan. 7 on YouTube and showed the Kentucky man on the West Terrace of the Capitol building wearing a "distinctive yellow-and-blue checked shirt or jacket," according to the affidavit.
The fourth individual in the indictment, Jeffrey Scott Brown, was denied release back in September…
The Orange County Register
In agreeing to a request by prosecutors to keep Jeffrey Scott Brown behind bars pending trial, U.S. District Judge Rudolph Contreras cited Brown’s “egregious actions at the Capitol,” along with a loud, one-man protest staged by Brown inside a Costco in Tustin against the state’s COVID-19 restrictions.
(snip)
A search of Brown’s Santa Ana home and vehicle after his arrest turned up multiple cans of pepper spray, a taser, a machete, a baseball bat with the words “Tire Striker” on the side, a bow and arrows, and a receipt for bear spray, ammunition and zip ties,” according to prosecutors.
The judge noted that Brown appears to have taken part in prior planning before traveling to the capitol, allegedly taking part in a messaging group of “able-bodied individuals” who were coming to Washington D.C. “ready and wiling to fight.” He also wrote that Brown “carried pepper spray during the riot and almost certainly used it against law enforcement.”
“Brown’s conduct was severe even by Capitol rioter standards,” Contreras wrote.
The FBI continues to seek the public’s assistance in identifying individuals who participated in unlawful conduct during the Capitol Insurrection. New images are added frequently...
If you have information about individuals who participated in the largest assault on police officers in U.S. history at the U.S. Capitol on January 6th, call 1-800-CALL-FBI (1-800-225-5324) or leave a tip online at the FBI’s website.
If you just can’t get enough information about the terrorists who tried to usurp our democracy, then these links are for you…
Department of Justice Capitol Breach Cases
FBI US Capitol Violence Most Wanted
Insider Searchable Table
George Washington University Spreadsheet — Updated Daily
www.fbi.gov/...NPR — Updated Database
seditiontracker.com
ProPublica Capitol Riot videos lifted from Parler
KUMU — Capitol Riot Insurrectionist Networks
Just Security — January 6th Clearinghouse
The Trace — Capitol Riot Gun Arrests
USA Today January 6 Capitol Riot Arrests