Centre Daily Times

Cotton among GOP lawmakers who back Jan. 6 defendants

- BY MICHAEL MACAGNONE

Republican Sen. Tom Cotton of Arkansas consistent­ly has staked out a tough-on-crime stance during his time in the Senate, but he and other congressio­nal Republican­s have sided with the defendants in a Supreme Court case about the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the Capitol.

The justices hear oral arguments Tuesday in a case from Joseph Fischer, who is challengin­g his charges related to Jan. 6 under a law that allows up to a 20-year prison sentence for people convicted of “corruptly” obstructin­g, influencin­g or impeding a proceeding before Congress.

A decision that sides with Fischer could upend hundreds of pending cases against Jan. 6 defendants – as well as the Washington­based federal criminal case against former President Donald Trump.

According to prosecutor­s, Fischer, a former police officer, entered the Capitol after the building had been broken into, charged a police line, assaulted officers and was removed about four minutes later.

Cotton and House Judiciary Chairman Jim Jordan of Ohio led a group of Republican members of Congress who filed a brief in the case that urges the justices to toss a specific charge against Fischer and others.

The group argues that the statute is being used for political prosecutio­ns of Jan. 6 defendants, by bringing a charge carrying a 20-year sentence rather than a charge that carries a year or less that is frequently used against most protesters who disrupt Congress.

“If allowed to stand, the lower court’s decision will only reward and incentiviz­e politicall­y motivated uses of ill-fitting criminal statutes with harsh penalties,” Cotton’s brief said.

Elsewhere in his career, Cotton has advocated for tougher criminal sentencing and more aggressive prosecutio­n of defendants. In response to an attack on Paul Pelosi, husband of former Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., Cotton told CBS the “answer to all of these crimes is to get tough on crime and throw the book at these criminals.”

In 2022, he held up the confirmati­ons of U.S. attorney nominees because he wanted the Justice Department to help defend law enforcemen­t officers from lawsuits stemming from attacks on the federal court building in Portland, Ore., in 2022.

Cotton also wrote a controvers­ial opinion article in the New York Times that year that called for the military to be dispatched to stop riots amid the cultural and racial turmoil after police killed George Floyd.

And Cotton led Republican opposition to the 2018 criminal sentencing overhaul law now known as the First Step Act, which was signed into law by Trump. He did not respond to a request for comment on the brief.

In a sign of how the case at the Supreme Court centers on a more specific legal question, Sen. Mike Lee of Utah, a supporter of that sentencing law overhaul, also signed on to the Republican brief.

The brief fits into broader Republican responses to Jan. 6, including allegation­s that the federal government has treated those defendants more harshly than others.

The Biden administra­tion has defended the use of the statute, arguing that Fischer disrupted the constituti­onally mandated counting of electoral votes when he entered the Capitol during the attack.

The government’s brief at the Supreme Court pointed out that Fischer’s messages before Jan. 6 showed he knew he could be arrested and mentioned the possibilit­y of dragging Democrats out of the Capitol for a “mob trial,” indicating that he intended to disrupt the proceeding.

In Fischer’s case, the trial judge initially dismissed the charge, finding that the statute should not apply to rioters who stormed the Capitol and disrupted the Electoral College count. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit reversed the judge, holding in a 2-1 decision that the statute could apply to congressio­nal proceeding­s, not just documents.

Cotton and the other Republican­s argue that the Biden administra­tion’s use of the charge against Trump is a sign of its danger as a tool of political prosecutio­ns.

Everyday lobbying activity and outreach to members of Congress could be considered felonious, the brief said.

“It criminaliz­es political conduct and grants the Department of Justice nearly unfettered discretion to prosecute Americans based on the perceived morality of their political beliefs,” Cotton’s brief said.

 ?? NATHAN HOWARD TNS ?? Sen. Tom Cotton, R-Ark., speaks with members of the media March 22 in Washington, D.C.
NATHAN HOWARD TNS Sen. Tom Cotton, R-Ark., speaks with members of the media March 22 in Washington, D.C.

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