The leader of the far-right group Proud Boys, Enrique Tarrio, visited Roger Stone at his Florida home and wore a t-shirt professing the Trump ally's innocence.

Tarrio, 34, showed up at Stone's Fort Lauderdale house wearing a black t-shirt which reads on the front: ROGER STONE DID NOTHING WRONG!

The image on the back of the shirt shows the face of late President Richard Nixon, Stone's idol. Underneath the photo of Nixon reads: IF I WEREN'T EFFECTIVE YOU WOULDN'T HATE ME.

The image beneath that shows a cartoon figure depicting Stone wearing his trademark striped suit and making a victory sign with his fingers while his hands are outstretched at opposite ends.

Roger Stone received a visitor at his Florida home on Sunday who came to show support for President Trump's longtime ally following his arrest - Proud Boys leader Enrique Tarrio

Tarrio, 34, the leader of the far-right Proud Boys movement, showed up at Stone's Fort Lauderdale home wearing a black t-shirt which reads on the front: ROGER STONE DID NOTHING WRONG!

The image on the back shows the face of Richard Nixon. Underneath the photo of Nixon reads: IF I WEREN'T EFFECTIVE YOU WOULDN'T HATE ME. The image beneath that shows a cartoon figure depicting Stone wearing his trademark striped suit and making a victory sign

The victory sign was made famous by Nixon who flashed it regularly during his political career.

The t-shirt is a gimmick produced by a web site which Stone hopes will raise money for his legal bills.

'Friends, I need your help,' Stone writes on the web site.

'Despite a lack of evidence of Russian Collusion, Wikileaks collaboration or any other illegal activity in the 2016 election, long time Trump advisor Roger Stone has been targeted by Special Counsel Robert Mueller.

Tarrio is seen above walking into the home on Sunday afternoon. He has been the leader of Proud Boys since Gavin McInnes resigned in November

'Mueller seeks to criminalize normal political activities by Roger Stone while ignoring the blatantly illegal activities of the Clinton campaign and the Obama NSA, DOJ and FBI.

'Roger Stone refuses to be pressured into testifying against President Trump.

'His legal fees in this epic fight could top $2million, threatening to destroy him and his family.

'Please help us. Everything will be used to help defray the costs of keeping up the battle against those that would silence Roger Stone and turn him against President Trump.'

Tarrio succeeded Gavin McInnes, the co-founder of Vice Media, as the leader of the controversial group.

In November, McInnes announced his resignation from the group after it was learned that FBI officials told local authorities in Clark County, Washington State that the Proud Boys was an 'extremist' organization with 'ties to White Nationalism'.

Days later, the top FBI agent in Oregon contradicted the assessment given to Clark County officials.

Special Agent in Charge Renn Cannon told reporters in Portland that the bureau did not designate Proud Boys as an extremist organization, according to The Oregonian.

Cannon said that the information given to Clark County authorities 'tried to characterize the potential threat from individuals within that group.'

He clarified that while the bureau does not designate organizations, it will investigate any alleged conspiracies to commit crimes.

'We do not intend and did not intend to designate the group as extremist,' he said.

The tattoo of Nixon is identical to the one on Stone's back (seen in the above undated file photo). Stone is known to be an admirer of the disgraced late President

The t-shirt is a gimmick produced by a web site which Stone hopes will raise money for his legal bills. Tarrio is seen above wearing the shirt on Sunday

McInnes quit as leader of the men-only, self-described 'Western chauvinist' group weeks after nine members were arrested by the New York Police Department for their involvement in a brawl with antifa activists on the Upper East Side of Manhattan

McInnes quit as leader of the men-only, self-described 'Western chauvinist' group weeks after nine members were arrested by the New York Police Department for their involvement in a brawl with antifa activists on the Upper East Side of Manhattan.

Three antifa members were also arrested, though there was criticism of the NYPD because it waited until days later to arrest the Proud Boys members.

The October 12 brawl took place outside of a club where McInnes was invited to address a group of Republicans.

The willingness of Republicans to invite the leader of a group denounced as a hate organization and 'neo-fascist' also sparked outrage among liberals.

Proud Boys has also been behind numerous acts of political violence across the country, authorities say.

'The FBI has warned local law enforcement agencies that the Proud Boys are actively recruiting in the Pacific north-west,' the FBI said in a November memo.

'Proud Boys members have contributed to the recent escalation of violence at political rallies held on college campuses, and in cities like Charlottesville, Virginia, Portland, Oregon, and Seattle, Washington.'

Nine 'Proud Boys' members arrested after brawl in New York Then-Proud Boys leader Gavin McInnes held a rally for around 50 people at the vandalized Manhattan GOP headquarters on October 12. After the rally was over, a number of bare-knuckle fights broke out with members of Antifa. The combatants were wrestling one another on the sidewalk. The New York Police Department arrested three Antifa members on the night of the scuffle, but did not arrest anyone from Proud Boys. Days later, the NYPD reviewed surveillance footage which led to the arrest and indictment of nine members of Proud Boys. Proud Boys members are seen above assaulting an anti-racist protester on Manhattan's Upper East Side on October 12 The brawl took place after the group's then-leader, Gavin McInnes, addressed a group of Manhattan Republicans On the night of the incident, the NYPD arrested three people involved in the brawl, but no Proud Boys members. Police later used footage and arrested nine members of Proud Boys All 12 were charged with various counts of rioting, assault, and attempted assault. 'Followed the Proud Boys as they left the event,' photojournalist Shay Horse tweeted after the incident. 'About 1-2 blocks away a 30 (proud boys) vs. 3 fight broke out.' 'It ended with 30 proud boys pummeling a guy on the ground screaming, 'ARE YOU BRAVE NOW F****t?!' he wrote. McInnes managed to drive off without getting arrested, witnesses told the New York Daily News. No serious injuries were reported. The Proud Boys posed for a picture on the street before going to an East Side bar, he tweeted, adding that 'many fights were happening at once.' The fight broke out just before 9pm on Third Avenue and East 84th Street where vandals sprayed anarchy symbols on its doors. About 80 protesters showed up at the club on Friday night chanting, 'No racists, no KKK, no fascist USA' and holding signs and banners, including some opposing white supremacy. The three men, Finbarr Slonim, 20, and Caleb Perkins, 35, both of the Upper East Side and Kai Russo, 20, of Brooklyn, were charged with robbery, harassment and assault. It was later learned they were there to protest Proud Boys. Councilman Rory Lancman said in a statement that he was outraged that no Proud Boys members ended up in handcuffs despite being seen fighting while police stood nearby. 'It is revolting to see white supremacists commit a hate crime on the streets of New York City — in full view of the NYPD — and for none of them to be arrested or prosecuted,' Lancman said. 'We have seen this in other cities, but it is shocking to see it here.' 'Hateful and violent behavior has no place in New York City, and those responsible must be arrested and prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law.' Advertisement

McInnes has even encouraged violence. He was once quoted as saying: 'Fighting olves everything.'

He announced his resignation from Proud Boys just days after the arrest of the group's members in New York.

'I am told by my legal team and law enforcement that this gesture could help alleviate their sentencing,' McInnes said at the time.

McIness and Proud Boys have denied the label 'alt-right' as well as ties to white nationalism or white supremacism.

'The alt-right advocates for an all-white ethnostate, something we have never done at any point,' the Proud Boys said in a statement to DailyMail.com.

'And our chairman, and countless Proud Boys of color in the group being there is proof of that.'

The Southern Poverty Law Center, a nonprofit which monitors hate groups in America, accuses Proud Boys of propagating racist, Islamophobic, misogynistic, and homophobic rhetoric.

McInnes has been quoted as saying that immigrants bring a 'rape culture' to America and that Muslims have a 'problem with inbreeding.'

He has also said that Muslims are 'stupid' and 'the only thing they really respect is violence and being tough.'

Since taking over for McInnes, Tarrio has vowed that the group will not change its behavior.

'We’re just, basically, a group of guys that hang out and drink beer together and just have a good time,' he told Heavy.

'Obviously, we’re a political group but that’s secondary in nature.

'We just enjoy our time with our brotherhood.'

Tarrio was spotted walking into Stone's house just hours after the Stone, the self-described political dirty trickster, did not rule out cooperating with special counsel Robert Mueller's Russia investigation after vowing he would not turn on President Donald Trump.

'That's a question I'll have to determine after my attorneys have some discussion,' he told ABC's 'This Week.' 'If there is wrongdoing, I know of none, but if there is, I would testify honestly.'

He added: 'I’d also testify honestly about any other matter, including any communications with the president. It’s true that we spoke on the phone, but those communications are political in nature, they’re benign, and there is certainly no conspiracy with Russia.'

Stone, 66, was charged on Friday with lying about his pursuit of Russian-hacked emails damaging to Hillary Clinton's 2016 election bid. He said after his arraignment he would not 'bear false witness against the president.'

On Sunday, he slammed the charges as 'thin as p*** on a rock.'

'I’m prepared to fight for my life,' he told ABC News.

Earlier on Sunday, Stone did not rule out cooperating with special counsel Robert Mueller

Roger Stone, flashing a victory sign after his court appearance, said he's innocent

Roger Stone is seen outside of his Florida home on Sunday after his ABC interview, flashing a victory sign

He has proclaimed his innocence.

Mueller's team charged Stone with five counts of lying to Congress, one count of obstruction of an official proceeding, and one count of witness tampering.

Stone said he has not spoken to the president about the Russia investigation.

'Have you ever had any conversations with the president during the campaign or since the campaign about Russia or the Mueller investigation?' ABC anchor George Stephanopolous asked him.

'None whatsoever,' Stone replied.. 'Categorically. ... Zero. Zero.'

He also said he has not asked the president for a pardon.

'I have never asked for a pardon,' he said.

Stone is a long time GOP operative who has been friends with Trump for years. He served as an adviser to Trump's 2016 campaign. He left on August 8, 2015 amid controversy, with he claiming he quit and Trump claiming he was fired. But he stayed in touch with the campaign after he formally left.

He downplayed questions on whether he was concerned President Trump seemed to distanced himself from their relationship.

'I never discussed these matters with the president and everything that I did regarding trying to get as much public attention to the Wikileaks disclosures among voters, among the media is constitutionally protected free speech. That's what I engaged in. It's called politics and they haven’t criminalized it, at least not yet,' he told ABC.

On Saturday night the president took to Twitter to say: 'Roger Stone didn't even work for me anywhere near the Election! WITCH HUNT!'

Roger Stone outside his Fort Lauderdale, Fla., home

The indictment does not charge Stone with crimes directly related to Russia or with conspiracy to skew the 2016 election, but with what legal experts call 'process crimes' – lying to investigators and trying to tamper with their work after being asked about contacts he claimed to have with WikiLeaks around the time the anti-privacy group published thousands of stolen emails that embarrassed Hillary Clinton's campaign.

Stone told ABC he will tell the court that any 'error in memory was without intent.'

'I am human and I did make some errors but they're errors that would be inconsequential within the scope of this investigation,' he said.

He said repeatedly during his interview that he used publicly available information to make his claims during the 2016 campaign.

'All I did was take publicly available information and try to hype it to get it as much attention as possible, because I had a tip, the information was politically significant and that it would come in October,' he said.

The indictment also alleges that a top Trump campaign official instructed Stone to get information from WikiLeaks about hacked Democratic email ahead of the 2016 election.

Stone claims that official is Rick Gates, who is cooperating with Mueller's investigation, and whom Stone claims is seeking a reduction in his sentence.'

He said he never talked about the subject with Gates.

'I never spoke about this matter with Rick Gates. But I’m mindful of the special counsel's ability to induce people to say things that are not true, particularly people who are seeking a reduction in their sentence or people who have an ax to grind,' he said.

Robert Mueller and his team asked for Stone's indictment to be sealed until he was arrested

Agents wearing body armor and drawing their weapons swarmed Stone's home in a posh south Florida neighborhood on Friday morning after the indictment was unsealed

Courtroom sketches from Friday morning show Roger Stone in handcuffs as he was led in, and then standing behind a podium next to his lawyer

FBI agents clad in bulletproof vests arrived at Stone's Fort Lauderdale mansion with guns drawn on Friday morning after Mueller unsealed a seven-count indictment from a grand jury impaneled in his sprawling probe of Russian election meddling.

Mueller asked a judge Thursday to keep Stone's indictment sealed until his arrest, arguing that 'law enforcement believes that publicity resulting from disclosure will increase the risk of the defendant.

The special counsel has been investigating Stone for any communications with Wikileaks during the 2016 campaign.

He blasted the FBI for their treatment of him during his arrest in the pre-dawn hours on Friday.

'I think the way I was treated on Thursday was extraordinary and I think the American people need to hear about it,' he told ABC News.

'This was an attempt to poison the jury pool,' he charged. 'These are Gestapo tactics.'

He noted he would have turned himself in if asked.

'They simply could have called my lawyers and I would have turned myself in,' he said.

Stone appeared in court in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, Friday morning. He was freed on bond.

Stone emerged from the federal court building flashing a V-for victory with both hands raised, Richard Nixon-style, after appearing in front of a judge Friday afternoon.

He addressed scores of reporters outside the court to say: 'I am falsely accused' while protesters around him shouted 'lock him up' and supporters chanted 'Roger! Roger!'

Donald Trump, left, has now tried to distance himself from indicted Roger Stone, right, saying he 'never even worked for me near the election'

'I will plead not guilty to the charges,' Stone said, shouting over the protests. 'I will defeat them in court. I believe this is a politically motivated investigation.'

He added: 'There is no circumstance whatsoever under which I will bear false witness against the president, nor will I make up lies to ease the pressure on myself. I look forward to being fully and completely vindicated.'

Wikileaks, shortly before the Democratic National Convention in 2016, posted hacked emails from officials.

The emails revealed how the party was working to secure Hillary Clinton's nomination over that of primary challenger Bernie Sanders and resulted in then Democratic National Convention Chairwoman Debbie Wasserman Schultz resigning her post.

During the presidential campaign, Stone publicly bragged about having 'backchannel communications' with Julian Assange and, in multiple occasions, appeared to predict the WikiLeaks releases.

Since then, Stone has walked back those claims.

He said his claims were exaggerations based on public information, as well as tips from New York radio host Randy Credico.

In the indictment, Stone is charged with tampering with Credico, including tell him to do a 'Frank Pentageli' in his congressional testimony.

Frank Pentageli i a character in the film "The Godfather Part II" who testified before a congressional committee that he does not know critical information that he does in fact know.

Stone said that conversation was a joke between the two men.

'Mr. Credico is an impressionist. He does Humphrey Bogart. He does Jack Nicholson. He does Richard Nixon. He does Bill Clinton. The exchange we talked about is Roger Stone this, Roger Stone that. Roger Stone was in the olive oil business with my father but that was a long time ago. It has to be seen in context. It is a humorous exchange,' he said.

'So they’re taking things out of context, present them in a light that it mischaracterized their significance. I never told Mr. Credico to lie. I did - at one point when he said my liberal friends will be very upset, my progressive friends will be upset if they believe I was helping you because they would think I was helping Trump - it was only in that context that the Fifth Amendment protections were discussed,' he added.