Texarkana Gazette

Some Capitol rioters try to profit from crimes

- By Michael Kunzelman

Facing prison time and dire personal consequenc­es for storming the U.S. Capitol, some Jan. 6 defendants are trying to profit from their participat­ion in the deadly riot, using it as a platform to drum up cash, promote business endeavors and boost social media profiles.

A Nevada man jailed on riot charges asked his mother to contact publishers for a book he was writing about “the Capitol incident.” A rioter from Washington state helped his father hawk clothes and other merchandis­e bearing slogans such as “Our House” and images of the Capitol building. A Virginia man released a rap album with riot-themed songs and a cover photograph of him sitting on a police vehicle outside the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021.

Those actions are sometimes complicati­ng matters for defendants when they face judges at sentencing as prosecutor­s point to the profit-chasing activities in seeking tougher punishment­s. The Justice Department, in some instances, is trying to claw back money that rioters have made off the insurrecti­on.

In one case, federal authoritie­s have seized tens of thousands of dollars from a defendant who sold his footage from Jan. 6. In another case, a Florida man’s plea deal allows the U.S. government to collect profits from any book he gets published over the next five years.

And prosecutor­s want a Maine man who raised more than $20,000 from supporters to surrender some of the money because a taxpayer-funded public defender is representi­ng him.

Many rioters have paid a steep personal price for their actions on Jan. 6. At sentencing, rioters often ask for leniency on the grounds that they already have experience­d severe consequenc­es for their crimes.

They lost jobs or entire careers. Marriages fell apart. Friends and relatives shunned them or even reported them to the FBI. Strangers have sent them hate mail and online threats. And they have racked up expensive legal bills to defend themselves against federal charges ranging from misdemeano­rs to serious felonies.

Websites and crowdfundi­ng platforms set up to collect donations for Capitol riot defendants try to portray them as mistreated patriots or even political prisoners.

Robert Palmer, a Florida man who attacked police officers at the Capitol, asked a friend to create a crowdfundi­ng campaign for him online after he pleaded guilty. After seeing the campaign to “Help Patriot Rob,” a probation officer calculatin­g a sentencing recommenda­tion for Palmer didn’t give him credit for accepting responsibi­lity for his conduct. Palmer conceded that a post for the campaign falsely portrayed his conduct on Jan. 6. Acceptance of responsibi­lity can help shave months or even years off a sentence.

“When you threw the fire extinguish­er and the plank at the police officers, were you acting in self-defense?” asked U.S. District Judge Tanya Chutkan.

“No, ma’am, I was not,” Palmer said before the judge sentenced him to more than five years in prison.

A group calling itself the Patriot Freedom Project says it has raised more than $1 million in contributi­ons and paid more than $665,000 in grants and legal fees for families of Capitol riot defendants.

In April, a New Jerseybase­d foundation associated with the group filed an IRS applicatio­n for tax-exempt status. As of early August, an IRS database doesn’t list the foundation as a tax-exempt organizati­on. The Hughes Foundation’s IRS applicatio­n says its funds “principall­y” will benefit families of Jan. 6 defendants, with about 60% of the donated money going to foundation activities. The rest will cover management and fundraisin­g expenses, including salaries, it adds.

Rioters have found other ways to enrich or promote themselves.

Jeremy Grace, who was sentenced to three weeks in jail for entering the Capitol, tried to profit off his participat­ion by helping his dad sell T-shirts, baseball caps, water bottles, decals and other gear with phrases such as “Our House” and “Back the Blue” and images of the Capitol, prosecutor­s said.

Prosecutor­s said Grace’s “audacity” to sell “Back the Blue” parapherna­lia is “especially disturbing” because he watched other rioters confront police officers on Jan. 6. A defense lawyer, however, said Grace didn’t break any laws or earn any profits by helping his father sell the merchandis­e.

Richard “Bigo” Barnett, an Arkansas man photograph­ed propping his feet up on a desk in the office of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., has charged donors $100 for photos of him with his feet on a desk while under house arrest. Defense lawyer Joseph McBride said prosecutor­s have “zero grounds” to prevent Barnett from raising money for his defense before a December trial date.

 ?? AP Photo/Julio Cortez, File ?? ■ Supporters of President Donald Trump try to break through a police barrier Jan. 6, 2021, at the Capitol in Washington. Facing prison time and dire personal consequenc­es for storming the U.S. Capitol, some Jan. 6 defendants are trying to profit from their participat­ion in the deadly riot, using it as a platform to drum up cash, promote business endeavors and boost social media profiles.
AP Photo/Julio Cortez, File ■ Supporters of President Donald Trump try to break through a police barrier Jan. 6, 2021, at the Capitol in Washington. Facing prison time and dire personal consequenc­es for storming the U.S. Capitol, some Jan. 6 defendants are trying to profit from their participat­ion in the deadly riot, using it as a platform to drum up cash, promote business endeavors and boost social media profiles.

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