Connecticut Post (Sunday)

Attorney: Woman charged in D. C. protest didn’t know she was on Capitol grounds

- By Jordan Fenster

The attorney for Groton resident Victoria Bergeson, charged in connection to Wednesday’s protests in Washington, said he will seek a jury trial, arguing that his client was not aware she was on U. S. Capitol grounds when she was arrested.

“People assume she’s part of that crazed mob,” attorney Sam Bogash said Saturday. “She was never even that close to the building.”

Bergeson, 40, was one of two people identified as from Connecticu­t who were arrested and charged after a mob stormed the Capitol building in an attempt to stop the certificat­ion of Electoral College votes in favor of President- elect Joe Biden.

Bergeson was arrested with Maurcio Mendez, 40, also of Groton, who Bogash said was his client’s boyfriend. Bogash is not representi­ng Mendez. Both were charged with curfew violation and unlawful entry.

“The official charge is unlawful entry on Capitol grounds,” Bogash said, a misdemeano­r, though it meets the threshold for a jury trial. The charge carries a maximum sentence of six months in prison.

“I think this has to go to trial,” Bogash said. “For her to be convicted, the government would have to prove that she was knowingly on Capitol grounds when she shouldn’t have been. I don’t think they can prove she knew she was on Capitol grounds.”

Bogash said Bergeson was among 18 others at the Peace Monument. The statue was erected in 1878 to commemorat­e naval deaths during the Civil War.

“Cars go around it,” Bogash said. “I don’t think half the people in D. C. know that’s Capitol grounds. They thought they were standing on a traffic circle 100 feet from the lawn that leads up to the Capitol building, but it was Capitol grounds.”

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