Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Riot suspects raise Fox footage

Prosecutor­s: Jan. 6 clips Carlson aired ‘are not exculpator­y’

- TOM JACKMAN AND SPENCER S. HSU

The Justice Department has fired back at a bid by defense attorneys to have the seditious conspiracy case against the farright group Proud Boys thrown out based on footage of the Jan. 6 Capitol riot aired by television personalit­y Tucker Carlson.

A lawyer for Proud Boys defendant Dominic Pezzola filed a motion to dismiss the case last week, citing Carlson’s show as he argued prosecutor­s withheld surveillan­ce footage from the riot and concocted “a lie” that an insurrecti­on occurred that day in 2021.

The move emboldened other Jan. 6 supporters to call for widespread review and reversal of cases, such as the one involving Jacob Chansley, the “QAnon Shaman,” who pleaded guilty in 2021 to obstructin­g Congress and was sentenced to 41 months in prison. Carlson had shown footage of Chansley, the face-painted, horn-hatted supporter of Donald Trump, walking calmly through the Capitol halls with officers sometimes following him. The TV host argued the videos show that Chansley was nonviolent and over-prosecuted by the government, and Chansley’s former defense attorney alleged the footage had not been provided as it should have been.

Prosecutor­s responded that all but 10 seconds of Capitol surveillan­ce footage, including the clips played by Carlson, had been released to Pezzola, Chansley and all defendants in September 2021. The clips shown by Carlson “are not exculpator­y of Pezzola or any other participan­t in the siege of the Capitol,” prosecutor­s Jason McCullough and Conor Mulroe wrote.

“Once tethered to facts and reality, defendant Pezzola’s arguments quickly unravel,” they wrote.

At media outlets’ request, prosecutor­s also made public footage that connects Chansley more directly to rioting than the brief clip aired on Carlson’s program. In two videos released Monday and played in court in 2021, Chansley can be seen surging through a door moments after Pezzola is seen using a stolen police shield to smash a Capitol window to access the building. And an earlier video shows Chansley among a powerful mob that overran a group of Capitol Police officers outside the building.

U.S. District Judge Timothy J. Kelly, presiding over the Proud Boys trial, has not yet ruled on the motion by Pezzola’s lawyer, Roger Roots, to dismiss the case or to declare a mistrial over the government’s alleged misconduct.

Chansley’s lawyer at the time of his plea, Albert Watkins, told The Washington Post last week that he had not seen any of the videos shown by Carlson and that the government had failed to disclose them. Carlson was granted access to 41,000 hours of Capitol surveillan­ce video by House Speaker Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., and showed several minutes without conflict to argue the government and news media have overstated the violent nature of the riot.

Roots argued that he also had not received the videos of peaceful behavior inside the Capitol, including a scene of Chansley praying while standing on the Senate dais.

“This footage is plainly exculpator­y,” Roots wrote in asking that the case be thrown out, “as it establishe­s that the Senate chamber was never violently breached and — in fact — was treated respectful­ly by January 6 [protesters]. … It was not Pezzola or co-defendants who caused the Congress to recess. Congress interrupte­d its own proceeding­s.”

The prosecutor­s noted that Carlson only showed Chansley’s actions from 2:56 p.m. to 3 p.m. But video released Monday and played at Chansley’s sentencing in November 2021, showed that he was part of a mob that breached an outer police line at 2:09 p.m. and was less than a minute behind Pezzola in the initial breach of the building soon after.

Moments after Pezzola’s entry, he can be seen on video roaming toward the Senate, while members, including Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., are being rushed out of the building. Prosecutor­s said Chansley then “faced off with members of the U.S. Capitol Police for more than thirty minutes in front of the Senate Chamber doors, while elected officials, including the Vice President of the United States, were fleeing from the chamber.”

Carlson showed clips of Chansley seemingly being escorted by police officers at times. Prosecutor­s acknowledg­ed that “a sole officer, who was trying to de-escalate the situation, was with Chansley as he made his way to the Senate floor after initially breaching the Chamber, as the televised footage reflects.”

The government said the footage aired by Carlson “fails to show that Chansley subsequent­ly refused to be escorted out by this lone officer and instead left the Capitol only after additional officers arrived and forcibly escorted him out.”

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