Further thoughts on this new indictment:
First, putting two and two together, here's a portion of a post I wrote in this thread back in July. This was in the context of some back and forth between a few of us over how 'deliberate' versus 'hasty' this was.
Now, I'm not posting that as an 'I told you so', but rather look at the links. At the time, an Oath Keeper from Florida pled guilty to various lesser offences, and was reportedly cooperating with authorities. Now, having read through the indictment today, part of the crew charged were from a Florida cell. There is talk in the indictment of other people 'known to the Grand Jury', as well as considerable material from encrypted chats on the Signal app. Signal is pretty damned good for security and privacy; the weakest point is the user. I'm going to guess we are seeing the fruits of that cooperation by the guy who pled out.
Second: This indictment today has some heavy charges. Seditious conspiracy is 20 years; that's double the maximum for rebellion or insurrection (surprising- maybe an historical quirk there)
18 U.S. Code Chapter 115 - TREASON, SEDITION, AND SUBVERSIVE ACTIVITIES It's noteworthy that these charges are only just starting to drop; they took their time to build the cases. I note that all thsoe charged today were from the Oath Keepers. They are only one of a number of organizations that were likely involved in this stuff. I infer from this that the oath keepers crew was one single contained investigation, though obviously information will be shared between investigative teams. I suspect we will see similar indictments unsealed against members of other groups, such as the Proud Boys.
This shows that investigators and prosecutors have successfully worked their way a fair distance up the 'chain of command' in at least one of the January 6th conspiracies, and that they're successfully leveraging a combination of cooperating witnesses, digital forensics, and comms that the bad guys thought were secure. It also shows that the feds are capable of OPSEC on this one. This same leader of the Oath Keepers has been named repeatedly in various articles asking "whya ren't the feds going after this guy?" with various speculations that he may be informant. Similar dynamics have played out with so-far unindicted Proud Boys, and others.
Third: there is likely some interplay between the January 6th commission and the DOJ, so as to not accidentally blow up criminal cases. The unsealing of indictments and evidence in criminal proceedings may open up more at the congressional committee.
Fourth: With arrests of prominent militia leadership, this will put investigators in a position to assess the extent, if any, to which political / party-connected figures played a role in this. In the course of arrests and searches they will likely seize phones, computers, etc. Communications will be accessed. They'll likely already have call logs (numbers dialed to and from, date, time, and call length) and will be in a position to press on any evidence they may have (if they do) of calls between people now arrested and charged, and others who may have political connections. It may well be that there isn't any of this- but if they're is, that's now starting to be within reach. Nothing stops them from working towards a cooperation and plea deal even with these indictments laid. 20 years is a long time to rot.
I bet some not very good people are sweating a bit tonight.