Rome News-Tribune

Justice Department: Sedition charge may apply to protest violence

- By Michael Balsamo, Alanna Durkin Richer and Colleen Long

WASHINGTON — In a memo to U.S. attorneys Thursday obtained by The Associated Press, the Justice Department emphasized that federal prosecutor­s should aggressive­ly go after demonstrat­ors who cause violence — and even sedition charges could potentiall­y apply.

The sedition statute doesn’t require proof of a plot to overthrow the government, the memo read. It instead could be used when a defendant tries to oppose the government’s authority by force.

Attorney General William Barr has been pushing his U.S. attorneys to bring federal charges in protest-related violence whenever they can, keeping a grip on cases even if a defendant could be tried instead in state court. Federal conviction­s often result in longer prison sentences; sedition alone could lead to up to 20 years behind bars.

The memo cited as a hypothetic­al example “a group has conspired to take a federal courthouse or other federal property by force,” but the real thing took place in Portland, Oregon, during clashes that erupted night after night between law enforcemen­t and demonstrat­ors.

Justice officials also explored whether it could pursue either criminal or civil rights charges against city officials there, spokeswoma­n Kerri Kupec told The AP. She would not say whether charges were still being considered.

The Trump administra­tion’s crackdown on protest violence has already led to more than 300 arrests on federal crimes in the protests since the death of George Floyd.

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