An East Bay man who allegedly traveled to Charlottesville, Va., last year to participate in the deadly “Unite the Right” rally will be detained until his trial, a federal judge ruled Monday.

Cole Evan White, 24, of Clayton, was charged this month with inciting a riot and traveling across state lines to incite a riot more than a year after the August 2017 rally, which erupted into clashes between white supremacist groups and counterprotesters. One woman was killed after a known neo-Nazi sympathizer allegedly drove his car into a group of peaceful marchers.

An FBI affidavit used to indict White, along with three other California men, included photos of the 24-year-old allegedly participating in a tiki torch march on Aug. 11, 2017, and a rally the next day. Prosecutors said the photos show White using a torch as a weapon and head-butting two counterprotesters, including a woman who was left with a bloodied face.

At his detention hearing Monday in U.S. District Court in Oakland, White, in a red Alameda County jail jumpsuit, addressed the court only to answer “no” to a question from Judge Kandis Westmore in between conversations with his defense attorney, David J. Cohen.

White’s family, including his parents and grandmother, sat in the gallery.

“This is a family crisis,” said Jacqueline Aldana, White’s mother. She declined to comment further.

After hearing arguments from Cohen and prosecutor Philip Kearney, Judge Westmore determined that White was a flight risk and a danger to the community and denied his release.

The prosecution said multiple weapons were recovered from White’s home.

Three men — Benjamin Daley, Thomas Gillen and Michael Miselis — have been detained on similar charges. Each case will be tried in Virginia.

White was fired from his job as a cook at an East Bay hot dog chain last year after Twitter users identified him in pictures from the rally and circulated his name and photo on social media.

Ashley McBride is a San Francisco Chronicle staff writer. Email: ashley.mcbride@sfchronicle.com Twitter:@ashleynmcb