Chicago Sun-Times

Chicago Heights man gets more than three years in prison for threatenin­g Biden’s inaugurati­on

- BY JON SEIDEL, FEDERAL COURTS REPORTER jseidel@suntimes.com | @SeidelCont­ent

A federal judge has sentenced a Chicago Heights man to 37 months in prison for leveling a threat against President Joe Biden’s 2021 inaugurati­on, a punishment designed in part to help “stop this tsunami of threats against our elected officials.”

Prosecutor­s had asked U.S. District Judge Ronald Guzman to sentence Louis Capriotti only to two-and-a-half years in prison. But Guzman said Capriotti’s history of violence and criminal conviction­s suggests he thought he would face no consequenc­es.

“That stops here, and it stops now,” Guzman said.

The FBI even warned Capriotti in early 2020 about earlier threats he had made. And Tuesday, a prosecutor revealed Capriotti told agents then, “it’s real simple guys. They f--ed with the president, so we f---ed with them back.”

Guzman called Capriotti’s threats “vicious, laced with profanity, disgusting in every way.” And he called Capriotti’s false claim of being a Marine “particular­ly despicable.”

“He is nothing like a Marine,” Guzman said.

Capriotti, dressed in an orange jumpsuit with his legs shackled in Guzman’s courtroom, declined to make a comment to the judge before being sentenced.

Capriotti left a voicemail for a member of Congress on Dec. 29, 2020, in which he said “we will surround the m-----f------ White House and we will kill any m-----f------ Democrat that steps on the m-----f------ lawn.”

One week later, rioters stormed the U.S. Capitol and interrupte­d the Electoral College vote, igniting what’s been described as likely the largest criminal investigat­ion in U.S. history. Hundreds now face criminal charges, including at least 27 Illinoisan­s. Capriotti was arrested on Jan. 12, 2021, six days after the Capitol breach.

Capriotti’s threats were not connected to the breach. He did not participat­e in it or travel to Washington, D.C. Still, federal prosecutor­s say, “the timing of Capriotti’s voice messages should not be ignored” and only made his crime worse.

Meanwhile, Capriotti’s attorney has pointed to the “very light sentences” given to many people convicted for their participat­ion in the Capitol breach. Defense attorney Jack Corfman also argued in a recent court memo that “our current political rhetoric has led to widespread use of harsher, more inflammato­ry language.”

Capriotti crossed the line, Corfman wrote. But he “did not do so in a vacuum, divorced from the political and news contexts around him.” Rather, “he did so with the news on his television.”

Capriotti pleaded guilty last October.

In a letter to the judge in March, Capriotti wrote, “I have learned my lesson. I do not want to spend any more of my life in jail. I understand that these calls crossed a line and I will not make any more to any politician­s ever again.”

Capriotti has spent more than a year in downtown Chicago’s Metropolit­an Correction­al Center. A magistrate judge ordered Capriotti held in federal custody Jan. 21, 2021 — the day after Biden’s inaugurati­on — after a prosecutor played part of Capriotti’s voicemail rant in court. The voicemail had been left for a member of Congress from New Jersey.

Capriotti could be heard in the recording saying that, if “m-----f------ p---- a-- Republican­s and these Democrat f------ terrorists think that Joe Biden is going to put his hand on the Bible and walk into that f------ White House on Jan. 20th, they’re sadly f------ mistaken.”

Capriotti also said, “Democrats are f-----terrorists. They’re baby killers, gun grabbers, God-hating, cop-hating, open borders, fake climate change c---s------ cheaters.”

He also lied about being a “nine-year Marine, active duty.”

It wasn’t the first time Capriotti made threatenin­g calls to members of Congress, prosecutor­s say. FBI agents interviewe­d him in Orland Park on Feb. 7, 2020, about earlier calls he allegedly made. Capriotti acknowledg­ed then that his voicemails could be perceived as threatenin­g and dangerous, prosecutor­s said.

Assistant U.S. Attorney James Durkin wrote in his own court memo that Capriotti has about 25 previous conviction­s. Though many are for traffic offenses, they also include conviction­s for domestic battery and assault, according to the prosecutor. That record meant that “Capriotti is capable of following through on his anger and threats,” Durkin wrote.

 ?? COOK COUNTY SHERIFF ?? Louis Capriotti
COOK COUNTY SHERIFF Louis Capriotti

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