Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Spear-lugging D.C. rioter gets 41 months in prison

- COMPILED BY DEMOCRAT-GAZETTE STAFF FROM WIRE REPORTS Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Jacques Billeaud of The Associated Press and by Alan Feuer of The New York Times.

Jacob Chansley, the former actor and Navy sailor better known as the QAnon Shaman, who was portrayed by a prosecutor as “the flag-bearer” of the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol, was sentenced Wednesday to 41 months in prison.

The image of Chansley holding a flagpole topped with a spear tip and looking as if he were howling was one of the most striking to emerge from the riot. He has since repudiated the QAnon movement, which is centered on the baseless belief that former President Donald Trump was fighting a cabal of Satan-worshippin­g, child sex traffickin­g cannibals.

Chansley, 34, of Arizona, who pleaded guilty to a felony charge of obstructin­g an official proceeding, was among the first rioters to enter the building.

Though he isn’t accused of violence, prosecutor­s say Chansley was the “public face of the Capitol riot” who went into the attack with a weapon, ignored repeated police orders to leave the building and gloated about his actions in the days immediatel­y after the attack.

Before he was sentenced, Chansley told U.S. District Judge Royce Lamberth it was wrong for him to enter the Capitol and that he accepts responsibi­lity for his actions. He emphasized he wasn’t an insurrecti­onist and is troubled with the way he was portrayed in news stories in the aftermath of the riot.

“I have no excuse,” Chansley said. “No excuses whatsoever. My behavior is indefensib­le.”

The judge said Chansley’s remorse appeared to be genuine but noted the seriousnes­s of his actions in the Capitol. “What you did was terrible,” Lamberth said. “You made yourself the center of the riot.”

He is among 650 people charged in the riot that forced lawmakers into hiding as they were meeting to certify President Joe Biden’s Electoral College victory. More than 120 defendants have pleaded guilty, mostly to misdemeano­r charges of demonstrat­ing in the Capitol that carry a maximum of six months in prison.

Chansley and Scott Fairlamb, a New Jersey gym owner sentenced last week for punching a police officer during the attack, have received the longest prison sentences out of the 38 Capitol riot defendants who have been punished so far.

Chansley, who has been in jail for 10 months, sought to be sentenced to time served. His lawyer, Albert Watkins, said his client has longstandi­ng mental health problems that were worsened by being held in solitary confinemen­t due to covid-19 protocols and is in dire need of mental health treatment.

In the year before the Capitol riot, Chansley appeared in costume at pro-Trump events, protests over face mask requiremen­ts and at a gathering of Trump supporters in November 2020 outside an election office in downtown Phoenix where votes from the presidenti­al race were being counted.

His attorney has said Chansley was “horrendous­ly smitten” by Trump and believed, like other rioters, that Trump had called him to the Capitol but later felt betrayed after Trump refused to grant him and others who participat­ed in the insurrecti­on a pardon.

Watkins has said Chansley had been under pressure from family members not to plead guilty because they believed Trump would be reinstated as president and pardon him.

After spending his first month in jail, Chansley said he reevaluate­d his life, felt regret for having stormed the building and apologized for causing fear in others.

He twice quit eating while in jail and lost 20 pounds until he was given organic food.

The judge had previously rejected Chansley’s claims that the six-foot flagpole he carried during the riot wasn’t a weapon and that the metal spear tip was an ornament, saying the sharpened six-inch point could have been used to stab people from a distance.

 ?? (AP/Manuel Balce Ceneta) ?? Jacob Chansley (right) and other rioters are confronted by U.S. Capitol Police officers outside the Senate chamber on Jan. 6. Chansley, who pleaded guilty to a felony charge of obstructin­g an official proceeding, was among the first rioters to enter the building.
(AP/Manuel Balce Ceneta) Jacob Chansley (right) and other rioters are confronted by U.S. Capitol Police officers outside the Senate chamber on Jan. 6. Chansley, who pleaded guilty to a felony charge of obstructin­g an official proceeding, was among the first rioters to enter the building.

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