Daily Press

Judge keeps election-related charges against Chesapeake men

- By Claudia Lauer

PHILADELPH­IA — A Philadelph­ia judge declined Thursday to dismiss election-related charges against two Virginia men accused of driving with guns and a lockpickin­g tool to a site where Philadelph­ia votes were being counted in early November.

Lawyers for Joshua Macias,

42, and Antonio LaMotta, 61, both of Chesapeake, had argued that there was no evidence they interfered or tried to interfere with election-related activities and that it appeared they were being punished for their beliefs, including support for false theories that the presidenti­al election was fraudulent.

Both men originally were arrested on weapons charges early Nov. 5 after Philadelph­ia police officers, acting on a tip from the FBI, stopped them near the Pennsylvan­ia Convention Center, where votes were being counted.

Authoritie­s said they parked a Hummer a few blocks away that was adorned with QAnon stickers and contained an AR-style rifle and ammunition.

LaMotta was carrying an unlicensed firearm, and Macias was carrying a firearm licensed in Virginia, authoritie­s said.

In the motion to drop the charges of attempted interferen­ce with primaries and elections and of conspiracy, Lauren Wimmer, LaMotta’s attorney, argued that prosecutor­s had not proved the men had made a substantia­l step toward interferin­g with an election-related duty.

“I think we’re really punishing them for their thoughts, and that’s what this comes down to,” she said during a virtual court hearing Thursday.

“There’s no evidence of them scouting out where the fraudulent ballots are. They didn’t tap on doors and windows, asking where is the truck full of ballots.”

Macias’ attorney, William Brennan, likened text messages between the two men and their drive to Pennsylvan­ia to cases of Philadelph­ia Eagles fans threatenin­g to kill the Dallas Cowboys.

“It’s delusions of grandeur ... but they go down and tailgate, and drink their beer and then they go home,” he said.

Macias “purports to hold a certain set of political beliefs and those are beliefs, you know, I might not agree with and I don’t. But, it’s puffery without the action.”

Assistant District Attorney Andrew Wellbrock said, however, that police did not have to stop the two in the process of breaking into the Convention Center for their actions to fall under the statute.

“It doesn’t matter whether they succeeded or if their beliefs were false,” Wellbrock argued Thursday.

“Police found them before that trouble started. ... They didn’t succeed, but that’s not the standard.”

Judge Mark Moore said the state had presented enough evidence based on text messages between the men and their planning the drive to “give a serious picture to what the court believes was these individual­s’ intent.”

The issues raised by defense attorneys would be better decided by a jury before denying the motion to drop the elections charges, Moore said.

Weapons-related charges against Macias had been dropped because he was licensed to carry the gun in Virginia, but a spokespers­on for the prosecutor’s office said those charges were reinstated.

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