Roger Stone today is sitting in a D.C. federal court begging a judge not to crack down on him for being, well, Roger Stone. The Fort Lauderdale resident was arrested last month as part of Robert Mueller's investigation into alleged ties between the Trump administration and Russian hackers. After he was released on bail, Stone last week posted a photo on social media of the judge in his case, Amy Berman Jackson, next to an image of gun crosshairs. Whether intentional or not, the image seemed to be encouraging Stone's followers to shoot the judge.

In court today, Stone apologized profusely for his actions. Then he admitted something that most observers had expected for quite a while: He's working closely with various members of the Florida chapter of the Proud Boys, the hard-right, pro-Trump, semifascist group with numerous ties to harder-core white-supremacist organizations.

According to multiple reporters in the courtroom today, Stone has admitted he's coordinating extensively with the group. Stone even said that Jacob Engels — a notorious alt-right InfoWars reporter and all but admitted member of the Proud Boys — has access to Stone's cell phone and social media accounts.

Stone was asked in court today how he obtained the photo of Judge Jackson. He told the court he had been "sent" a series of images by multiple volunteers. He then named a few: Engels, Florida Proud Boys chapter founder Tyler Ziolkowski (who goes by “Tyler Whyte”), and Enrique Tarrio, the Miami Proud Boy who has become chairman of the national group. (Tarrio was caught on camera this week sitting behind Donald Trump during the president's Monday rally at Florida International University.) Stone did not say which volunteer sent him the image he posted online, but he admitted Engels and Tarrio have spent a good deal of time at his house.

Neither Engels nor Whyte responded to messages from New Times today. Reached by phone, Tarrio denied posting the image of Jackson but defended whoever did.

"I didn't post it," he said. "I know a few people have access." He added later he doesn't "see anything wrong with the picture. There's no crosshair over her head; it's an icon on the top right."

But Judge Jackson disagreed, and even Stone himself apologized today for his conduct.

He added Raymond Perez and Tyler White, but could not recall anymore volunteer names. Said there is a "revolving door" of 5-6 people coming in and out of his house — Courtney (@courtneybuble) February 21, 2019

He also named Gateway Pundit "reporter"/troll Jacob Engels and Proud Boys extremist leader Enrique Tarrio as his aides. Says that Engels had his phone at some point, implying that he could have done the Instagram, per @ryanjreilly on scene — Andy Campbell (@AndyBCampbell) February 21, 2019

Stone says that Engels had his phone on the day of the threatening Instagram post. And that Engels has his Instagram login information. Again, Engels is in the courtroom. They could call him. — Dan Friedman (@dfriedman33) February 21, 2019

“You can ask me different ways, but I’m not gonna answer,” Engels said, after I asked if he is willing to take responsibly for the photo. Stone says one of 5 or 6 volunteers who assist him with social media found the picture, but he claimed he didn’t know which one. — Dan Friedman (@dfriedman33) February 21, 2019

But the news is unsurprising: The Daily Beast reported in January that Stone was using the Proud Boys as a “personal army.” Engels, too, has long acknowledged he is a Stone protégé, and the Daily Beast reported earlier this year that Engels was beginning to function as Stone's "assistant." Engels also routinely appears alongside the Trump adviser at events — Engels was even in the D.C. courtroom today while Stone gave his testimony, though Engels refused to speak to reporters. (Stone mentioned another man, Rey Perez, who also appears to be an avowed Proud Boy, according to his social-media profiles.)

Florida's Proud Boys have spent the past few months defending Stone in public. After Stone was arrested January 25, Tarrio and other Florida Proud Boys showed up outside the courtroom in shirts emblazoned with the message "Roger Stone did nothing wrong." Tarrio wore the same shirt at Monday's Trump rally. Stone has also posted multiple images of himself hanging out with Proud Boys in South Florida.

See more of the Miami Proud Boys' social media posts here. Roger Stone (center) poses with the Miami Proud Boys. Via Instagram

New Times previously dug into the backgrounds of Tarrio and Engels. Before joining the Proud Boys, Tarrio was caught committing a few crimes, including stealing a motorcycle and selling stolen diabetic test strips online. (He was sentenced to 16 months in prison in the latter case.) He told New Times he joined the Proud Boys — a self-described "Western chauvinist" group that rails against feminism and tells followers it's "OK to be white" — after attending a 2017 party in Miami with disgraced alt-right personality Milo Yiannopoulos. Tarrio identifies as Afro-Cuban, but other members of the group have repeatedly been linked to harder-core white-supremacist groups — and to acts of violence. (Tarrio himself attended the infamous 2017 “Unite the Right” rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, during which a neo-Nazi murdered a progressive counter-protester named Heather Heyer. Tarrio claims he left the rally before any violence broke out.) Former Vice magazine founder Gavin McInnes started the group, but even McInnes left after some Proud Boys were filmed beating counter-protesters in New York City.

Tarrio's group has also made a series of offensive and racist statements online:

See more of the Miami Proud Boys' social media posts here. Proud Boys social media posts across various platforms, including private posts on Minds. Via social media

Engels, meanwhile, claims to be a reporter "embedded" within the Proud Boys but in reality is almost certainly a member. (He's even been photographed wearing the traditional Proud Boys uniform — a black-and-yellow Fred Perry polo shirt.) He runs the online blog the Central Florida Post and has contributed to alt-right misinformation sites InfoWars and the Gateway Pundit.

Stone's pleas and apologies today did not convince Judge Jackson. Although Stone apologized and claimed he is now broke and struggling to pay his bills, she ordered him to stop discussing his case in public.