An 18-year-old man from Georgia who was charged in the Capitol riot told a judge he would be a good boy if he could go home to Mom and Dad.
Bruno Joseph Cua, who has been in federal custody since his Feb. 5 arrest for his role in the Capitol attack, wrote a letter to U.S. District Court Judge Randolph D. Moss on Thursday, begging to be sent home while he waited. at his trial, reports the Atlanta Journal Constitution.
According to the criminal indictment, Cua, from Milton, Georgia, was charged with assault on a federal officer, civil disorder and several other crimes. Cua was recorded in the Senate Hall and spotted in a video posted by The New Yorker magazine.
CAPITOL RIOTER ‘QANON SHAMAN’ DEMANDS IN NEW INTERVIEW THAT OFFICERS ‘WAVE HIM’ TO THE BUILDING ON JAN. 6
“Yes, for all who ask, I have stormed the capital (sic) with hundreds of thousands of patriots,” Cua deleted on his Instagram account since. “What happened was incredible,” he continued. “Yes, we have physically penetrated our path.”
Cua is the youngest person charged in the riot, which he joined after attending with his parents the previous protest near the White House, which drove him to Washington, the Journal Constitution said.

The drivers charged Cua, of Milton, Georgia, with assault on a federal officer, civil disorder and several other crimes.
The drivers charged Cua, of Milton, Georgia, with assault on a federal officer, civil disorder and several other crimes.
Cua sends a complainant: “I love you, I love you both.” to his people on Feb. 12 when he was denied a mortgage, Atlanta’s 11 Alive reports.
He promised in his letter “not to step one foot off the line” if he was able to return to his home in Atlanta, Atlanta.
The teenager was partially denied connection due to his history of violent rhetoric online, including a January 6 report that said, ‘We did not attack the American people. We attacked the swamp rats’, according to the Journal Constitution.
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“Given how innaproprite (sic) my social media activity was, I understand your concerns,” Cua wrote. “I am not a danger to anyone and will absolutely never act according to what I have said.”
“I completely lost those aggressive feelings and switched from the whole political (sic) idea,” he added a few sentences later. “I was wrong.”
Prosecutors also objected to the release of Cua under the supervision of his parents because they drove with him to Washington.
Click here to read more from the New York Post.