San Diego Union-Tribune

S.D. COUNTY MAN GETS 30-DAY PRISON TERM FOR HIS ROLE IN CAPITOL BREACH

He posted on social media screenshot of him inside building

- BY KRISTINA DAVIS kristina.davis@sduniontri­bune.com

A San Diego County man was sentenced Monday to 30 days in prison for his role in the U.S. Capitol insurrecti­on on Jan. 6, 2021.

Philip Weisbecker, 51, pleaded guilty in March to one misdemeano­r count of parading or demonstrat­ing in the Capitol. He is among a handful of people with San Diego ties who have been charged or linked to the Capitol breach.

His attorney on Monday argued for a sentence of time served during a virtual hearing in Washington, D.C., where the massive federal prosecutio­n is based. Prosecutor­s asked for three months in prison. The judge settled on 30 days of custody, which can be served intermitte­ntly on weekends if desired, along with two years of probation.

Weisbecker had already agreed to pay $500 in restitutio­n as part of his plea agreement to help cover damage to the Capitol.

In a sentencing memorandum filed before the hearing, his lawyer said Weisbecker was influenced by “media manipulati­on” of the Black Lives Matter protests of 2020 and President Donald Trump’s false claims of a stolen election.

“People like Mr. Weisbecker stood no chance at truly grasping the gravity or reality of the situation,” wrote attorney Kira Anne West.

Weisbecker flew from San Diego to attend Trump’s rally in Washington, then followed the crowd to the Capitol and went inside. He said he was there as a citizen journalist and admitted to entering the offices of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and taking pictures in the Rotunda.

He was not accused of any destructiv­e or violent acts.

Weisbecker posted on social media a screenshot from Fox News of him inside the Capitol. The FBI were tipped to his involvemen­t, launching the investigat­ion.

Prosecutor­s pointed to Weisbecker’s actions upon returning home as aggravatin­g factors.

“Weisbecker celebrated the violence of the day after January 6 by posting pictures and video of the protestors on the scaffoldin­g and in restricted areas,” prosecutor­s wrote in a sentencing memo. “He repeatedly asserted on Facebook that the media was lying and downplayed the violence of the day, blaming it on Black Lives Matters and Antifa while falsely claiming those entities and Capitol Police Officers let him inside the Capitol.”

Prosecutor­s also noted Weisbecker’s history of verbally abusive behavior toward federal officials, including during inspection­s at ports of entry and in an April encounter with TSA agents at the San Diego Internatio­nal Airport in which he called them “monkeys” and other profanitie­s.

Weisbecker, who works as an estimator for constructi­on projects, apologized for his actions in a letter to the judge. However, during the hearing the judge suggested the two-page letter seemed to be an attempt to minimize the crime.

“I take complete responsibi­lity for my actions of participat­ing as a citizen journalist that entered the capitol building at a time that was not open to the public for journalist­s,” Weisbecker wrote. “I failed to grasp the seriousnes­s of my physical presence at the event. I am extremely remorseful for my actions and miss being a free American.”

He used to live in Ocean Beach but now resides in Dulzura near the U.S.-Mexico border, on land he described as being near a smuggling trail. He argued the need for a gun for safety reasons, protection he was prohibited from possessing while on pretrial monitoring.

The judge on Monday declined to rule on the issue and left the decision up to probation officers.

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