After a nearly two-hour court hearing, a federal judge in Washington, D.C., did not rule Tuesday on whether the man accused of placing two pipe bombs at Democratic and Republican national committee headquarters the night before the U.S. Capitol riot will remain in custody pending trial.
Judge Matthew J. Sharbaugh said he would issue a written order in the next day or two after he further reviews the filings from prosecutors and the defense team. Attorneys for Brian Cole Jr. are seeking his release as he awaits trial and said they are willing to comply with house arrest or an ankle monitor. Federal prosecutors argue that Cole should remain in custody because he poses a threat to the community.
Cole, 30, was arrested at his Woodbridge, Virginia, home earlier this month for allegedly planting the pipe bombs, marking a significant breakthrough in an almost five-year investigation.
He was charged with transporting an explosive device in interstate commerce with intent to kill, injure, intimidate or destroy property, and attempted malicious destruction by means of fire and explosive materials, according to charging documents. Cole has yet to enter a plea.
In the courtroom Tuesday, Cole wore a tan jumpsuit as he sat quietly and attentively throughout the hearing. Members of Cole’s family were in the courtroom. His grandmother Loretta Coll was called to the stand as a possible third-party custodian.
The arguments on Cole’s detention largely mirrored those previously laid out by the defense and government.
Ahead of Tuesday’s hearing, prosecutors filed a memo seeking pretrial detention for Cole and gave details about the suspect’s alleged motives in the case. They said that Cole gave an hourslong videotaped confession in an interview with FBI officials explaining why he allegedly placed the pipe bombs.
Cole’s defense team did not address the alleged confession in any significant way.
In court, prosecutors Charles Jones and Jocelyn Ballantine said that Cole had “wiped” his phone a total of 943 times, sometimes multiple times per day, citing it as evidence of “deception.”
The viability of the pipe bombs was also brought up at the hearing. Prosecutors said an expert had determined that the pipe bombs were viable and could have killed people. Cole’s defense team rejected the claim and noted that the bombs had never exploded.









