Daily Camera (Boulder)

Thousands attacked the Capitol. Who has answered for it?

Justice Dept. continues the investigat­ion

- By Chris Strohm

WASHINGTON — A year and a half after thousands of Donald Trump diehards overran the U.S. Capitol, prosecutor­s have scored relatively few felony conviction­s and face growing pressure to go after targets including the organizers and the former president himself.

The Justice Department’s massive investigat­ion — into the riot and deeper efforts to overturn Joe Biden’s election — has scored about 50 felony guilty pleas out of more than 800 defendants charged since the mob breached the neoclassic­al building in January 2021, in the most serious attack on American democracy in the modern era.

As the congressio­nal committee looking into the insurrecti­on prepares to hold its first public hearings this week, the only charges brought against Trump aides have been for failing to respond to the panel’s demands for informatio­n. Of those charged for the events of Jan. 6, at least 235 have pleaded guilty to misdemeano­r offenses such as illegal parading. About 70 — still fewer than 10% of the total — have been sentenced to time behind bars for assaulting law enforcemen­t officers and other crimes.

Even at that, the Justice Department has had to bring in reinforcem­ents from all over the country to help handle the caseload. It has detailed assistant U.S. attorneys nationwide and sought support from all 56 field offices of the Federal Bureau of Investigat­ion, as it sifts through reams of surveillan­ce footage, social media posts and testimony. In its budget request for 2023, the department is seeking $34 million to hire 131 more lawyers to work on the case.

“It is the most complex and wide-ranging that I’ve seen in the department’s history,” Deputy Attorney General Lisa Monaco said of the investigat­ion, in a recent discussion with Bloomberg about corporate crime. “It’s a top priority of the department to follow the facts wherever they go, including to hold accountabl­e perpetrato­rs at any level.”

The probe has made headway. It has led to arrests in almost all 50 states. The guilty pleas include three members of the far-right Oath Keepers, who are cooperatin­g with the inquiry. The U.S. has prevailed at all five jury trials held so far that included felony charges. On Friday it announced the indictment of former White House trade adviser Peter Navarro for defying a subpoena by the House committee, following longtime Trump adviser Steve Bannon’s indictment in November, and after a recent subpoena seeking communicat­ions within Trump’s inner circle.

And just Monday, amid criticism of the investigat­ion’s pace, prosecutor­s added charges of seditious conspiracy to its case against members of the Proud Boys, three days before the congressio­nal committee launches its hearings.

The Justice Department is now at a critical point in the case. Although it is traditiona­lly independen­t of the White House, the attorney general is a presidenti­al appointee, and Biden’s Democratic Party could use a boost from high-profile conviction­s in the case — and would be damaged by a flop. It all adds up to a major test of the department and of Attorney General Merrick Garland in particular, who has pledged to defend the rule of law while trying to keep Justice insulated from politics.

Garland said at a news conference last month that the department deliberate­ly refrains from talking publicly about ongoing cases and investigat­ions.

“If we let all possible witnesses know exactly where we are, at exactly what moment, it makes it very difficult for us to do our job of ensuring that the laws are not violated and that those who are accountabl­e are brought to justice,” he said.

It isn’t enough, said Melanie Sloan, senior adviser for the government watchdog American Oversight and a former federal prosecutor.

“Whatever DOJ is doing, I wish they were taking a more aggressive approach,” Sloan said. At the same time, she said, the department faces a quandary.

“Seditious conspiracy charges are extremely rare, so prosecutor­s don’t have experience trying these sorts of cases, and have their work cut out for them,” she said.

The U.S. attorney’s office for the District of Columbia, which is leading the case, declined to discuss details, as did Monaco.

“You’ll see the results of our investigat­ion when we bring actions in court,” said the 54-year-old prosecutor, who has spent 16 years at the Justice Department and once led its national security division. “Which is as it should be.”

One result is the conviction last month of former Army reservist and Navy security guard Timothy Hale-cusanelli, who hoped to foment a civil war when he stormed the Capitol, boasting to a friend afterward that the “tree of liberty must be refreshed with the blood of patriots and tyrants,” according to prosecutor­s. Instead, the New Jersey man, 32, now faces as many as 20 years in prison after a jury found him guilty of felony obstructio­n of an official proceeding and a slew of misdemeano­rs.

The longest sentence has gone to Florida resident Robert Palmer, 54, who pleaded guilty in October to assaulting and resisting law enforcemen­t officers using a dangerous weapon and got five years and three months in prison. Other significan­t wins include getting the three Oath Keepers to plead guilty to the most serious felony charge of seditious conspiracy and to cooperate with the government.

But so far most of the people arrested and charged in the case have received probation and a fine, according to data from the Justice Department and court documents. Critics say the probe has been plodding when it comes to higher-level acts by Trump and his closest associates. Current and former Justice officials say the magnitude of the case has required a methodical approach.

Frustratio­n with the department surfaced publicly during a March 28 hearing when some committee members urged swifter action in charging more of Trump’s allies for refusing to comply with their subpoenas.

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