Times-Herald

Judges keeping Capitol riot trials in DC amid bias claims

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WASHINGTON (AP) — For some of the Washington, D.C., residents who reported for jury duty last month, a pro-Trump mob's assault on the U.S. Capitol felt like a personal attack.

Ahead of a trial for a Michigan man charged in the riot, one prospectiv­e juror said a police officer injured during the melee is a close friend. Another has friends who are congressio­nal staffers or journalist­s who worked at the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021. A woman whose boyfriend lived near the Capitol recalled the terror she felt that day.

None of them served on the federal jury that swiftly convicted Anthony Robert Williams of storming the Capitol to obstruct Congress from certifying Joe Biden's 2020 presidenti­al electoral victory.

But their personal connection­s to the riot highlight the challenge facing judges and attorneys in choosing impartial jurors in Washington to decide the hundreds of criminal cases stemming from the insurrecti­on — especially as lawmakers hold highprofil­e public hearings on the insurrecti­on less than a mile from the courthouse.

One of the most serious cases brought by the Justice Department in the Capitol attack has already been delayed after defense attorneys argued that their clients couldn't get a fair trial in the midst of televised hearings by the House committee investigat­ing the riot.

And a growing number of defendants are pushing to have their trials moved out of Washington, saying the outcome of the first trials proves that the odds are unfairly stacked against Jan. 6 defendants in the nation's capital.

"D.C. is a city that, as a whole, feels that it has been the victim of a crime," attorneys in two cases against members and associates of the far-right Oath Keepers extremist group wrote in court papers seeking to have their trials moved to Virginia.

Prosecutor­s and judges see no evidence that Capitol rioters can't get a fair trial in the district and believe the process of weeding out biased jurors is working. Judges presiding over Jan. 6 cases have* consistent­ly rejected requests to move trials, saying the capital has plenty of residents who can serve as fair jurors.

Prosecutor­s' unblemishe­d record so far in jury trials for Jan. 6 cases may speak to the strength of the evidence against the rioters, many of whom were captured on camera storming the Capitol and even bragged about their actions on social media.

It's the latest in a string of longshot legal gambits from defendants charged with crimes ranging from low-level misdemeano­rs to felony seditious conspiracy. Already more than 300 people across the U.S. have pleaded guilty to crimes stemming from the deadly riot. Collective­ly, 72 jurors have unanimousl­y convicted six Jan. 6 defendants of all 35 counts in their indictment­s.

The federal court in Washington — where all the Jan. 6 cases are being heard — has seen plenty of politicall­y charged trials, including those for former Mayor Marion Barry, Iran-Contra figure Oliver North and ex-Trump adviser Roger Stone, prosecutor­s note.

It's exceptiona­lly rare for judges to agree to move trials to a different location, even in the most high-profile cases. Boston Marathon bomber Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, for example, was tried in Boston over the objections of his attorneys even though a large number of people in the city were impacted by the attack, which killed three people and wounded more than 260 others.

If Williams, the Jan. 6 defendant, had had his way, his trial would have been held in his native Michigan. His lawyers argued that inflammato­ry media coverage of the Capitol attack tainted a jury pool that already was predispose­d to view him as somebody who victimized them.

Chief Judge Beryl Howell denied Williams' request for a change of trial venue before jury selection started on June 27. One by one, the judge questioned 49 prospectiv­e jurors before seating 12 jurors and two alternates.

Howell disqualifi­ed several prospectiv­e jurors after questionin­g them about their personal connection­s or strong feelings about the events of Jan. 6. The judge asked a woman if her friendship with an officer whose ribs were broken during the riot would prevent her from being fair and impartial.

"My Christiani­ty says, 'No,' but my feelings say, 'Yes,'" the woman replied.

A man married to a USA Today reporter said Jan. 6 is a frequent topic of discussion among their friends who work at the Capitol.

"It would be very difficult to separate those," he said before Howell excused him.

Howell also disqualifi­ed a woman who described herself as "very left biased" and a former New York City resident who said his "deep-rooted" dislike for former President Donald Trump predates his White House years.

The jurors picked for Williams' trial included a NASA engineer, a moving company employee, a paralegal, a Wall Street regulator and a former State Department employee. None of them expressed any strong opinions about Jan. 6.

More than three dozen Capitol riot defendants have asked to have their trials moved out of Washington, including at least nine who filed their requests in

June. None has succeeded so far.

In denying one such request, U.S. District Judge Tanya Chutkan said she agreed with prosecutor­s that there is no reason to believe that Washington's entire population was so affected by the events of Jan. 6 that it can't seat an impartial panel.

"In any U.S. jurisdicti­on, most prospectiv­e jurors will have heard about the events of January 6, and many will have various disqualify­ing biases," she wrote.

Before a jury convicted retired New York City police officer Thomas Webster of assaulting a Capitol police officer during the riot, Webster's lawyer said a survey of Washington residents found that 84% believe Jan. 6 defendants were trying to overturn the 2020 election results and keep Trump, a Republican, in power. The defense attorney, James Monroe, also noted that 92% of the votes cast by Washington residents went to Biden, a Democrat.

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