Newly released footage from Roger's Stone surveillance camera shows FBI agents with guns drawn raiding the home of Trump's longtime ally.

Stone, 66, was arrested in an early morning raid of his Florida home on January 25 shown in footage obtained by Sinclair, and was indicted on several charges related to Robert Mueller's prob into Russian meddling during the 2016 presidential election.

The surveillance camera mounted above Stone's front door shows several agents in bullet proof vests, holding assault weapons and flashlights approaching the door right before 7am.

Moments later, Stone opens the door wearing a t-shirt that reads 'Roger Stone did nothing wrong' and is handcuffed and escorted out of his home barefoot.

Surveillance footage from a camera above Stone's front door shows the moment FBI agents approached him home on January 25

Stone is seen answering the door and being arrested by officers

President Donald Trump vouched for Stone and said he was 'very disappointed' in the way the FBI conducted the raid.

The president in an interview echoed Stone's own argument that he is not a violent person and doesn't own a gun, making the dramatic raid on his home last Friday by a team of armed agents unnecessary.

'Roger is not a person that they would have to worry about from that standpoint. And I thought it was sad to see it. Very sad,' Trump told the Daily Caller in an interview.

Asked about the FBI's show of force in making the arrest in a 'white collar case' – Stone is charged with obstruction, lying to Congress, and witness tampering – Trump responded that he was 'speaking for a lot of people that were very disappointed to see that go down that way.'

Stone was released hours after his arrested and insisted that he is innocent of a string of criminal charges brought by Mueller – and said he would never turn on the president.

Stone was sprung from jail on a $250,000 bond. He emerged from the federal court building flashing a V-for victory with both hands raised, Richard Nixon-style.

FBI agents who conducted raids on his home and office scooped up 'multiple hard drives containing several terabytes of information' in a case Robert Mueller has designated as complex.

The trove of electronic information was obtained under a warrant as the feds charged the longtime Trump advisor with lying to Congress, obstructing the Russia probe, and witness tampering.

But the breadth of information and a new government filing indicate an additional charge or charges could be in the cards.

The evidence is 'both voluminous and complex,' according to Mueller.

He is facing seven charges including making false statements to Congress and witness tampering

Stone was released on $250,000 bail after appearing in a Florida federal court, and said he would fight the charges and never turn against the president

Trump defended his longtime ally and said he was 'very disappointed' with the way the FBI conducted the raid

Mueller has charged six former aides of Trump, including his lawyer Michael Cohen, campaign chair Paul Manafort, and national security advisor Michael Flynn, in the 20 month old investigation into whether the 2016 Trump campaign colluded with Russians.

All have been accused of lying to investigators, and some also of financial and tax-related charges.

But none has yet been charged with any crime involving collusion with Russia, and Mueller has given no indication on whether or not any such charges could be forthcoming.

The Stone case is the closest Mueller has gotten to suggesting there was an illegal conspiracy to collude -- yet that was not among the charges.

Stone allegedly lied about contacts with WikiLeaks, the anti-secrecy website that published embarrassing documents from Trump's election rival Hillary Clinton that were allegedly hacked by Russian intelligence.

In a news conference Thursday, Stone said his alleged lies were simply memory lapses and were immaterial to the Russia collusion investigation.

'I'm not accused of collaboration, I'm not accused of conspiracy,' he said.

'There is no underlying crime.'