Sentinel & Enterprise

Bickering bogs trial of Proud Boys leaders

- By Michael Kunzelman and Lindsay Whitehurst

WASHINGTON >> The Capitol riot trial for Proud Boys leaders promised to be a historic showcase for some of the most compelling evidence of an alleged plot by far-right extremists to halt the transfer of presidenti­al power after the 2020 election.

One month into the trial, there have been plenty of fireworks, but mostly when the jury wasn’t in the courtroom.

Lawyers representi­ng the five Proud Boys charged with seditious conspiracy have repeatedly sparred with U. S. District Judge Timothy Kelly during breaks in testimony. At least 10 times, those lawyers have argued in vain for him to declare a mistrial.

The judge regularly admonishes lawyers for interrupti­ng him and has threatened to hold them in contempt if it continues. Two defense lawyers at one point floated the idea of withdrawin­g from the case if Kelly did not rule in their favor on evidentiar­y matters.

The barrage of bickering has bogged down the proceeding­s in the federal courthouse, where the Capitol can be seen in the distance from some windows. One recent day in court, defense lawyer Norm Pattis compared the trial to visiting “Gilligan’s Island,” the title and setting of the 1960sera sitcom about a shipwrecke­d boat’s crew and passengers.

“It was supposed to be a three-hour tour, and people were stranded together for an infinite period while they worked out their interperso­nal difficulti­es,” Pattis quipped.

The tension in the courtroom ref lects the high stakes for the Justice Department and the defendants. It’s one of the most serious cases to emerge from the Capitol riot on Jan. 6, 2021, and former Proud Boys national chairman Enrique Tarrio is perhaps the highest profile person to be charged so far in the assault.

The Proud Boys face up to 20 years in prison if convicted of seditious conspiracy. Acquittals on the rarely used charge — which strikes at the heart of what prosecutor­s say happened that day — would be a setback in the government’s Jan. 6 investigat­ion, which continues to grow two years later.

Tarrio and four lieutenant­s are accused of participat­ing in a weekslong plot to keep Democrat Joe Biden out of the White House after he defeated then- President Donald Trump in the 2020 election. Prosecutor­s say it culminated with Proud Boys mounting a coordinate­d assault on the Capitol alongside hundreds of other Trump supporters.

Defense lawyers say there’s no evidence that the Proud Boys plotted to attack the Capitol and stop Congress from certifying the Electoral College vote on Jan. 6. The lawyers claim prosecutor­s are mischaract­erizing bellicose online banter as a violent plot. They tried unsuccessf­ully to move the trial out of Washington, arguing that there was no way their clients could get a fair trial in front of a District of Columbia jury.

The Proud Boys trial is on a pace to last several weeks longer than last year’s landmark trial for Oath Keepers group leaders and members, who were charged in a separate Jan. 6 case.

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