Following the January 6th, 2021 insurrection at the U.S. Capitol, eight Valley residents were charged. Tuesday, the final of those eight defendants was found guilty.

Rachel Powell was in a Washington, D.C. courtroom Tuesday for a bench trial, where she faced nine charges that include civil disorder, obstruction, destruction of U.S. property, entering a restricted building or property with a dangerous weapon, and disorderly conduct.

U.S. District Court Judge Royce Lamberth determined Powell is guilty on all counts.

Powell was dubbed the "pink hat lady" or "bullhorn lady" in the days following the riot, after a video surfaced showing her wearing a pink knit cap and carrying a bullhorn.

Court documents detail Powell's actions that day.

The documents describe her entry into the Capitol, where she used an ice axe in attempt to break through a window. She then used a large cardboard tube as a battering ram to finish the job. The Office of the Architect of the Capitol says the window cost around $753.

Once inside, Powell used a bullhorn to give instructions to other rioters:

"Hey guys, I've been in the other room, listen to me. In the other room, on the other side of this door, right here where these feet are standing, there is a glass, that if somebody, if it's broken, you can drop down into a room underneath it. There's also two doors in the other room, one in the rear and one to the right when you go in, so people should probably coordinate together if you're going to take the building..."

The documents also detail Powell's social media activity before and after the events of January 6th. In a Facebook comment, someone asked Powell if she was "caught up in the violence." She responded, "I only mildly did. I was going around DC with a little beater bar all weekend and wasp spray and knives in my bag so I was pretty confident."

A Facebook message thread from November 22, 2020 revealed more about Powell's plans. Court documents refer to the other individual in the conversation as 'B.K.'

Powell: We did surveillance on an officials home. The person was not seen coming in and out. Is there a way to check and make sure she still owns this house so we KNOW we have the correct address?

B.K.: its better to send letters to their office and leave their family and private residences alone

Powell: No, it isn't. These f**kers need to start listening to the people and doing their jobs. Letters aren't working. Can I find this information at any courthouse or does it have to be from the courthouse that is near the home?

.........

Powell: Ok, here's the deal. We can still get Trump in I believe. If we do we might be ok for a few more years. So we need to really be on the people in charge of elections.

On January 7th, Powell took to Facebook to describe the previous day:

"The police fought back well. I did see them retreat before people were on the second floor but that was a fight to get them to retreat. They had their barricades removed from them and were pushed back. Some police showed fear. Some of them were patriots and you could see it in their face. Many of them stood their ground."

Powell also wrote, "nobody was let the f**k in. It was war."

On February 4th, the FBI executed a search warrant at Powell's Sandy Lake residence. According to the court documents, the agents found "a black jacket with a fur-lined hood that matched the one Powell wore on January 6, 2021; multiple broken phones; and two "go-bags" containing ammunition, rope, duct tape, knives, ninja stars, and lighters."

The document does note that during trial, the government was not able to prove Powell brought any of those items other than the jacket with her to Washington on January 6th.

Powell turned herself in the night of February 4th. At that time, the FBI found another "go-bag" inside her car.

After her arrest, Powell was briefly held at the Butler County Jail, where she made several phone calls. Court documents provide the transcript of a call Powell made to a family member.

Powell: It's crazy what they're saying. But all it is is a broken window in reality.

Family member: Yeah. An expensive broken window, though.

Powell: I know, but it wasn't even that big of a window. I don't understand. They're trying to say it was over $1,000 dollars.

The government requested Powell be taken into custody following Tuesday's guilty verdict, but the request was overruled by Judge Lamberth.

She will be free on bond until her October sentencing.