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Trump demands release of those jailed for 2021 Capitol attack

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CLINTON, Iowa — Donald Trump on Saturday downplayed his role in the siege of the US Capitol on the third anniversar­y of the attack, arguing that those prosecuted for storming the building should be freed.

Speaking at a campaign event in Clinton, Iowa with the first Republican nominating contest little more than a week away, Mr. Trump called those jailed in the wake of the Jan. 6, 2021 attack “hostages” and said they had been mistreated by the Biden administra­tion.

“They’ve suffered enough,” Mr. Trump said. “I call them hostages. Some people call them prisoners.”

Speaking to more than a thousand supporters in a school gymnasium, Mr. Trump repeated his unfounded claims that the 2020 election was fraudulent and cast himself as a victim of political persecutio­n.

“I got indicted because I challenged the crooked election,” Mr. Trump told the crowd.

Mr. Trump faces a bevy of state and federal charges for his attempts to subvert the election, but has not been charged with instigatin­g the 2021 insurrecti­on, when a mob of Trump supporters stormed the Capitol as legislator­s were certifying President Joseph R. Biden’s 2020 election victory.

Mr. Biden has repeatedly called Mr. Trump a threat to democracy on the campaign trail, and that messaging has emerged as a central theme of his campaign so far. Vice President Kamala Harris spoke of the Jan. 6 assault at length during an event in South Carolina on Saturday.

At recent campaign events in Iowa, Mr. Trump’s supporters — and even supporters of other Republican presidenti­al hopefuls — have downplayed the significan­ce of Jan. 6, and many have embraced conspiracy theories regarding the events of that day.

Mr. Trump himself has suggested during previous campaign stops that undercover FBI agents played a significan­t role instigatin­g the attack, an account not supported by official investigat­ions.

More than 1,200 people have been charged with taking part in the riot, and more than 900 have either pleaded guilty or been convicted following a trial.

“It wasn’t really an insurrecti­on,” said Hale Wilson, a Trump supporter from Des Moines who attended a campaign event in Newton, Iowa earlier in the day. “There were bad actors involved that got the crowd going.”

At the Clinton event, Erin George, a local county commission­er, said the prison sentences handed down to the rioters “were 100 percent unwarrante­d.”

Mr. Trump was in Iowa to curry support ahead of the state’s Republican caucus on Jan. 15, which is the first contest of the Republican presidenti­al nominating contest. He currently leads all competitor­s by more than 30 percentage points in the state, according to most polls. —

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