LISBON, Ohio - According to a report from ABC News, the FBI had questioned a retired U.S. Navy SEAL from Lisbon about his activities during the attack on the U.S. Capitol last week.

The network reports that Adam Newbold confirmed that investigators spoke with him about a video he posted after his trip to Washington to join a rally for President Trump.

According to the report, the video shows Newbold telling his Facebook followers that he was “proud” of the assault on the U.S. Capitol building that day.

"There was destruction, breaching the Capitol, our building, our house. And, um, to get in, you had to destroy doors and windows to get in," Newbold says in the video, which according to ABC News, has since been deleted.

As of Thursday morning, Newbold’s Facebook page still displayed a video recorded before the rally, telling fellow Trump supporters what they needed to know to join the caravan traveling to Washington.

After telling followers that police and National Guard members are not their enemies and hoped to bring them into the “fold,” Newbold said that the group was not looking for a fight.

“We are just very prepared, very capable, and very skilled patriots ready for a fight. And we will react without hesitation when called upon to do so,” said Newbold.  “The hope is that the folks that are driving the train of corruption will see that our nation is not nearly as soft as they thought it is, that they thought they had made it, and they will back the f--k down and allow our country to be the United States of America and follow the constitution of America.”

According to ABC News, Newbold said the FBI has interviewed him about his Washington activities and has asked for a second interview.

"I am cooperating with the FBI," Newbold told ABC News in a 45-minute interview in which he expressed remorse for his actions and said of the attack on the Capitol that "it was all taken too far."

Newbold denied that he ever assaulted police officers guarding the Capitol or penetrated the building himself, according to the ABC report.

Newbold operates the Lisbon-based Advanced Training Group Worldwide, which according to its website, is comprised of “veteran special operators and intelligence community professionals” offering marksmanship training and consulting services to federal agencies, law enforcement, and military clients.

In 2015, ATG received $1.4 million from the Department of Defense for government services.