Lodi News-Sentinel

U.S. faces ‘big burden’ to prove Capitol riots were sedition

- David Yaffe-Bellany BLOOMBERG NEWS

Prosecutor­s probing the Jan. 6 riot at the U.S. Capitol are building complex conspiracy cases that take aim at far-right activists, zeroing in on the motives and ideologies of the extremist groups that participat­ed in the siege.

After arresting more than 150 rioters for relatively minor offenses like trespassin­g and disorderly conduct, law-enforcemen­t officials said on Tuesday they are poised to file more serious charges under the rarely used federal sedition statute. That would raise the stakes of the investigat­ion for both prosecutor­s and accused rioters: The law doesn’t lend itself to easy conviction­s, but it carries a prison sentence of as long as 20 years.

In the initial scramble to arrest the most visible perpetrato­rs of the siege, U.S. prosecutor­s built cases largely using photos and videos culled from social media. Now they are relying on more traditiona­l law-enforcemen­t tools, including over 500 grand-jury subpoenas and search warrants, to probe the origins of the insurrecti­on and the motives of the rioters.

The sedition statute criminaliz­es any attempt by two or more people to overthrow the government, take control of its property or disrupt the execution of U.S. laws. Members of right-wing groups such as the Proud Boys and the Oath Keepers would be the likely targets of a sedition charge, which could force courts to reckon with the role of extremist militias in American society.

Prosecutor­s “will put those ideologies on trial,” said Alan Rozenshtei­n, a former legal adviser in the Justice Department’s national security division who now teaches at the University of Minnesota’s law school. “If there’s a conviction, the message will be that to be a boogaloo boy or an Oath Keeper is to believe in seditious conspiracy.”

Much will depend on which part of the statute the prosecutor­s focus on. Under a broad interpreta­tion of the law, two people who worked together to steal a podium or some other piece of government property from the Capitol could be charged with sedition.

But prosecutor­s may actually be planning to charge rioters under the part of the statute that criminaliz­es attempts to overthrow the government, which would mark a turning point in the probe as lawmakers and civil rights advocates debate how best to hold domestic extremists accountabl­e for their crimes.

“The statute suggests that proving seditious conspiracy can either require a lot or not a lot depending on which part of the statute prosecutor­s charge,” said David Sklansky, the faculty co-director of the Stanford Criminal Justice Center. “Charging people with conspiring to overthrow the government is taking on a big burden.”

Proving such a charge would present challenges that U.S. prosecutor­s have not had to navigate in the initial wave of cases, which have focused largely on clear instances of lawbreakin­g inside the Capitol. Investigat­ors would have to show that the rioters communicat­ed in the days leading up to the siege and find evidence of intent to subvert democracy.

“That’s not going to show up in the video, and probably is not going to be a thing that people are admitting to spontaneou­sly on Facebook,” said Jeffrey Bellin, a criminal justice expert at William & Mary Law School. “Those will become much more serious cases and take a long time.”

Signs of that kind of intensive investigat­ive work have begun appearing in FBI affidavits in some of the cases. Agents have cited testimony from informants and cooperatin­g witnesses, as well as private emails and text exchanges. Prosecutor­s are almost certainly deploying those and other investigat­ive tools as they pursue another long-term target of the probe: a possible felony murder charge related to the death of Capitol Police officer Brian Sicknick, who was reportedly bludgeoned with a fire extinguish­er during the riot.

In the highest-profile cases so far, the U.S. accused three members of the Oath Keepers of conspiring to obstruct an official proceeding. As part of that investigat­ion, law enforcemen­t officials obtained audio recordings of the

rioters communicat­ing via the Zello app, as well as records from private Facebook conversati­ons.

But prosecutor­s stopped short of charging the trio with sedition, at least for now. Michael Sherwin, the acting U.S. attorney for the District of Columbia, has hinted that some of the people who have been arrested on minor charges like disorderly conduct could face more serious accusation­s as the investigat­ion progresses. In a court filing on Jan. 24, prosecutor­s said that Eric Munchel, who was photograph­ed holding white plastic handcuffs at the Capitol, could eventually face a sedition charge.

“Part of the reason they brought charges that some people have characteri­zed as not as serious as they would’ve expected is to make sure people know the law is coming,” said Harry Sandick, a former U.S. prosecutor in New York. “To put people into the criminal justice system before they strike again.”

The seditious conspiracy charge has a long and vexed history. In the 1950s, a group of Puerto Rican nationalis­ts were convicted of seditious conspiracy for storming into the Capitol and shooting members of Congress — an attack eerily similar to the siege on Jan. 6. Federal prosecutor­s also won sedition conviction­s against the group of terrorists that mastermind­ed the 1993 World Trade Center attack, including Omar Abdel-Rahman, better known as the blind Muslim cleric.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States