Scott Fairlamb, a former MMA wrestler who owns a gym in New Jersey, was charged in January as one of the assailants involved in the Capitol insurrection.
The United States Department of Justice released footage of an MMA fighter attacking a police officer during the Jan. 6 Capitol insurrection.
Scott Fairlamb, who also runs a gym in Pompton Lakes, New Jersey, can be seen shoving a police officer before punching him in the face. He was also reportedly among the first to storm the building.
Fairlamb, whose brother is a Secret Service agent who once led Michelle Obama’s security team, was identified after multiple people sent tips to the FBI, which led to his arrest in January. He was indicted in February on 12 federal criminal counts but pleaded not guilty on April 13. Senior U.S. District Judge Royce C. Lamberth ruled that Fairlamb would be held without bail pending the outcome of his trial.
The judge also portrayed the former fighter as a danger to the community due to his violent criminal history, which includes several cases of assault. Fairlamb was also labeled as an adherent of the far-right QAnon conspiracy movement and was accused of threatening Missouri U.S. Rep. Cori Bush in June 2020 before the Democrat was elected to her first term in Congress in November.
It is worth noting that Fairlamb was among the business owners in New Jersey who attempted to defy stay-at home orders during the initial lockdowns due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
NEW: The DOJ just released more videos from 1/6 after CNN and other outlets sued for their release. Prosecutors say this is NJ gym owner Scott Fairlamb (in the camo jacket) shoving a cop (at 0:28), and then punching him in the face (at 0:31). Fairlamb pleaded not guilty. pic.twitter.com/VqrLSEBjvH
— Marshall Cohen (@MarshallCohen) June 18, 2021
Fairlamb, who went by the nickname “Wildman” during his MMA career, compiled a 0-1 professional record. His amateur record is unknown. His final fight took place at Ring of Combat 31 in 2010, where he lost to Michael Andrillo by submission. At the time, he fought out of the AMA Fight Club, which boasted fighters such as Charlie Brenneman, Rafaello Oliveira, and Ricardo Romero.