The Commercial Appeal

Deliberati­on underway for Jan. 6 trial

Defense urged jurors to acquit ex-police officer

- Michael Kunzelman

WASHINGTON – A defense attorney conceded on Friday that a former Virginia police officer broke laws when he entered the U.S. Capitol during last year’s riot, encouragin­g a federal jury to convict him of misdemeano­r offenses.

But the lawyer urged jurors to acquit former Rocky Mount police officer Thomas Robertson of felony charges that he armed himself with a weapon and stormed the Capitol with another off-duty officer to obstruct Congress from certifying President Joe Biden’s 2020 electoral victory.

Jurors began deliberati­ng after hearing closing arguments from Justice Department prosecutor­s and defense attorney Mark Rollins at Robertson’s jury trial, the second among hundreds of Capitol riot cases. The first ended last month with jurors convicting a Texas man, Guy Reffitt, of all five counts in his indictment.

Rollins said Robertson is “absolutely guilty” of illegally entering restricted areas of the Capitol and of engaging in disorderly conduct on Jan. 6, 2021. But the defense attorney argued that the evidence doesn’t support more serious charges that Robertson intended to stop Congress from certifying the Electoral College vote or that he was armed with a dangerous weapon, a large wooden stick.

“There were no plans to go down there and say, ‘I’m going to stop Congress from doing this vote,’ ” Rollins said.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Risa Berkower said Robertson went to Washington, D.C., and joined a “violent vigilante mob” because he believed the election was stolen from former President Donald Trump. He used the wooden stick to interfere with outnumbere­d police before he joined the crowd pouring into the Capitol, she said.

“The defendant did all this because he wanted to overturn the election,” Berkower said.

Robertson didn’t testify at his trial. A key witness for prosecutor­s in his case was Jacob Fracker, who also served on the Rocky Mount police force and viewed Robertson as a mentor and father figure.

Fracker was scheduled to be tried alongside Robertson before he pleaded guilty last month to a conspiracy charge and agreed to cooperate with federal authoritie­s. Fracker testified on Thursday that he initially believed that he was merely trespassin­g when he entered the Capitol building. However, he ultimately pleaded guilty to conspiring with Robertson to obstruct the joint session of Congress.

Fracker said he didn’t have a “verbal agreement” with anybody to obstruct the congressio­nal proceeding­s. He said he believed everybody in the mob “pretty much had the same goal” and didn’t need for it to be “said out loud.”

“It was clear that everyone around them had that same goal,” Berkower said.

Rollins said Robertson didn’t engage in any of the violence or destructio­n carried out by “knucklehea­ds” and “clowns” who stormed the Capitol.

“Don’t judge him by what the other people are doing,” he told jurors.

Robertson and Fracker drove with a neighbor to Washington on the morning of Jan. 6. Robertson brought three gas masks for them to use, according to prosecutor­s. After listening to speeches near the Washington Monument, Fracker, Robertson and the neighbor walked toward the Capitol, donned the gas masks and joined the growing mob, prosecutor­s said. Robertson stopped to help his neighbor, who was having trouble breathing. Fracker broke off and entered the building before Robertson, but they reunited inside the Capitol.

Defense attorney Camille Wagner said Robertson only went into the Capitol because he wanted to retrieve Fracker. Wagner also denied that Robertson wielded the stick as a weapon. She said the U.S. Army veteran was using it as a walking stick because he still has a limp from getting shot in the right thigh while working as a private contractor for the U.S. Defense Department in Afghanista­n in 2011.

Robertson was charged with six counts: obstructio­n of Congress, interferin­g with officers during a civil disorder, entering a restricted area while carrying a dangerous weapon, disorderly or disruptive conduct in a restricted area, disorderly or disruptive conduct inside the Capitol building and obstructio­n. The last charge stems from his alleged post-riot destructio­n of cellphones belonging to him and Fracker.

The town fired Robertson and Fracker

after the riot. Prosecutor­s said Robertson paid Fracker more than $30,000 after they were arrested, but Fracker said he believes Robertson wanted to cover his lost wages and wasn’t trying to “buy” his testimony.

Jurors saw some of Robertson’s vitriolic posts on social media before and after the Capitol riot. In a Facebook post on Nov. 7, 2020, Robertson said “being disenfranc­hised by fraud is my hard line.”

“I’ve spent most of my adult life fighting a counter insurgency. (I’m) about to become part of one, and a very effective one,” he wrote.

Robertson has been jailed since Cooper ruled in July that he violated the terms of his pretrial release by possessing firearms.

More than 770 people have been charged with federal crimes related to the riot. Over 240 of them have pleaded guilty, mostly to misdemeano­rs.

Robertson’s trial is one of four so far for Capitol riot defendants. Two others had their cases decided by bench trials before the same judge.

U.S. District Judge Trevor Mcfadden convicted New Mexico elected official Couy Griffin last month of illegally entering restricted Capitol grounds but acquitted him of engaging in disorderly conduct. On Wednesday, Mcfadden acquitted another New Mexico man, Matthew Martin, of all four charges that he faced.

Fracker said he believed everybody in the mob “pretty much had the same goal” and didn’t need for it to be “said out loud.”

 ?? JOHN MINCHILLO/AP FILE ?? Jacob Fracker, a former Virginia police officer, pleaded guilty to storming the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, with another off-duty officer.
JOHN MINCHILLO/AP FILE Jacob Fracker, a former Virginia police officer, pleaded guilty to storming the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, with another off-duty officer.

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