As Inauguration Day draws closer, federal prosecutors continue to charge participants in the riot at the Capitol on Jan. 6, adding to dozens of arrests that took place in Washington D.C. that day.
The attack left five people dead and sent lawmakers and Vice President Mike Pence fleeing to shelter.
There have been less than a dozen charged or arrested in connection to the riot with connections to Ohio and Kentucky, according to federal prosecutors and reporting from the Cincinnati Enquirer and Lousiville Courier-Journal.
More:Capitol riot arrests: See who's been charged across the U.S.
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Here's what we know:
Ohio
Donovan Crowl, 50, and Jessica Watkins, 38, both of Champaign County were arrested Monday on federal charges related to the breach of the Jan. 6 U.S. Capitol building in Washington D.C. Each faces three federal charges: obstructing an official proceeding, entering a restricted building and "violent entry or disorderly conduct."
According to court documents, Watkins and Crowl are members of the Ohio State Regular Militia a "dues-paying subset of the Oath Keepers."
The FBI agent said Crowl admitted to the incursion of the U.S. Capitol in an interview with the New Yorker magazine. According to the affidavit, Crowl said in the interview his militia protected Capitol police and expounded on other violence that occurred. Watkins posted about the incident on the social media platform Parler, according to court documents.
Justin Stoll, 40, of Wilmington, is accused of making interstate threats and tampering with a witness by threat. He was arrested by members of the FBI's Joint Terrorism Task Force. According to a federal criminal complaint, Stoll posted videos of himself outside the Capitol with the mob of protesters who stormed the building last Wednesday after attending a rally with President Donald Trump.
The recent charges are not directly related to Stoll's activities at the Capitol but are instead connected to threats he allegedly made days later to people who expressed alarm about his role in the riot.
"If you ever jeopardize me, from being with my family, you will absolutely meet your mother f------ maker," Stoll wrote, according to the complaint. "And I will be the one to arrange the meeting."
Christine Priola, 49, of Willoughby, has been charged after pictures of her were taken inside the U.S. Senate chamber, according to federal prosecutors. She is a former occupational therapist for the Cleveland schools, according to Cleveland.com.
Court documents said Priola became a suspect after a picture was taken of her in the chamber of the U.S. Senate showing her carrying a sign that said, “The Children Cry Out For Justice.”
Priola is accused of knowingly entering or remaining in any restricted building or grounds without lawful authority; violent entry and disorderly conduct on Capitol grounds and other charges. Prosecutors said Priola was released on bond with home detention and electronic home monitoring.
Kentucky
Michael Sparks, of Elizabethtown, was identified as the man shown on several videos from the event entering the Capitol building and roaming through the halls, according to federal agencies.
Sparks was the first individual to enter the building through the broken window around 2:13 p.m., a federal affidavit said, but he was not the last. The Elizabethtown man ended up following a group led by Doug Jensen, an Iowan seen in photos confronting Capitol Police officers while wearing a distinct "Q" shirt, through the halls of the building while political figures on the property were evacuated, according to an affidavit.
Chad Barrett Jones, 42, of Mount Washington, was arrested and faces several charges after being accused by a witness of using a rolled-up "Trump flag" to break glass panels on a door in the building, the Louisville FBI office said. The door was in the Speaker's Lobby, the same area in the Capitol where Ashli Babbitt was shot and killed by Capitol Police while attempting to crawl through a broken window.
Jones' charges include assault on a federal officer, certain acts during a civil disorder, destruction of government property over $1,000, obstruction of justice, unlawful entry on restricted building or grounds, violent entry and disorderly conduct on Capitol grounds
Gracyn Dawn Courtright, a 23-year-old University of Kentucky Student and West Virginia native, is also facing federal charges after screenshots of her inside the Capitol published on her now-deleted social media accounts emerged, including photos captioned "can't wait to tell my grandkids I was here," according to the FBI. Security footage, according to the FBI, also appeared to show Courtright inside the building carrying a "Members Only" sign up a set of stairs.
Courtright, according to court records, will be charged with knowingly entering or remaining in a restricted building or grounds, engaging in disorderly conduct in a restricted building, violent entry and disorderly conduct on Capitol grounds, and theft of government property under $1,000.
Damon Michael Beckley, 53, of Lousiville, was arrested by the FBI in Cub Run, according to a tweet from the agency. Beckley is being charged with disorderly conduct on Capitol grounds and unlawful entry of a restricted building. Beckley had given a viral interview from the Capitol during the deadly riot on Jan. 6, saying he wouldn't put up with "tyrannical rule."
Robert L. Bauer, of Cave City, Kentucky, and his cousin, Edward Hemenway of Winchester, Virginia, both accused of joining the Capitol mob, pleaded not guilty to trespassing and knowingly entering a restricted building or grounds.
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