The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Capitol rioters’ tears, remorse don’t spare them from jail

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WASHINGTON — Florida business owner Robert Palmer cheered on the violence at the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6 before he joined the fray. Screaming obscenitie­s, he hurled a wooden plank and a fire extinguish­er at police officers trying to ward off the mob.

Nearly a year later, Palmer fought back tears when he faced the federal judge who sentenced him to more than five years in prison. He said he was “horrified, absolutely devastated” by what he had done.

“I’m just so ashamed that I was a part of that,” Palmer told

U.S. District Judge Tanya Chutkan on Dec. 17 before she gave him the longest prison term for any rioter so far.

Judges are hearing tearful expression­s of remorse — and a litany of excuses — from rioters paying a price for joining the Jan. 6 insurrecti­on, even as others try to play down the deadly attack on a seat of American democracy.

The Justice Department’s investigat­ion of the riot has now entered the punishment phase. So far, 71 people have been sentenced for riot-related crimes. They include a company CEO, an architect, a retired Air Force lieutenant colonel, a gym owner, a former Houston police officer and a University of Kentucky student. Many rioters have said they lost jobs and friends after their mob of Donald Trump loyalists disrupted the certificat­ion of Joe Biden’s presidenti­al victory.

Fifty-six of the 71 pleaded guilty to a misdemeano­r count of parading, demonstrat­ing or picketing in a Capitol building. Most of them were sentenced to home confinemen­t or jail terms measured in weeks or months, according to an Associated Press tally of every sentencing. But rioters who assaulted police officers have gotten years behind bars.

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