Gulf Today

Capitol riot investigat­ion growing 2 years later

Judges also have ordered dozens of rioters to serve terms of home detention ranging from two weeks to one year — usually instead of jail time — and to collective­ly perform more than 14,000 hours of community service

- Michael Kunzelman, Associated Press

The largest investigat­ion in the Justice Department’s history keeps growing two years ater a violent mob of supporters of then-president Donald Trump atacked the US Capitol and challenged the foundation­s of American democracy. More than 930 people have been charged with federal crimes related to the siege on Jan. 6, 2021, and the tally increases by the week. Hundreds more people remain at large on the second anniversar­y of the unpreceden­ted assault that was fueled by lies that the 2020 election was stolen.

A surplus of self-incriminat­ing videos and social media posts has made it difficult for riot suspects to present viable defenses. Federal prosecutor­s have a near-perfect trial record, securing a conviction in all but one case. The cases have clogged Washington’s federal court, a building less than a mile from the Capitol. Virtually every weekday, judges are sentencing rioters or accepting their guilty pleas while carving out room on their dockets for trials. Already scheduled for this year are trials for about 140 riot defendants.

At least 538 cases, more than half of those brought so far, have been resolved through guilty pleas, trials, dismissals or the defendant’s death, according to an Associated Press review of court records. That leaves approximat­ely 400 unresolved cases at the outset of 2023.

While a House commitee has wrapped up its investigat­ion of the riot, the Justice Department’s work appears to be far from done. A special counsel is overseeing two federal investigat­ions involving Trump: one into the retention of classified documents at the former president’s Florida estate and a second into efforts to overturn the 2020 election.

The Jan. 6 atack as an “assault on our democracy,” Atorney General Merrick Garland said. “And we remain commited to doing everything in our power to prevent this from ever happening again,” he said in a statement Wednesday. A look at where the prosecutio­ns stand: The number of defendants charged with Jan. 6-related federal crimes is approachin­g 1,000. They range from misdemeano­r charges against people who entered the Capitol but did not engage in any violence to seditious conspiracy charges against members of the Oath Keepers and Proud Boys extremist groups accused of violently ploting to stop the transfer of presidenti­al power.

More than 100 police officers were injured at the Capitol. More than 280 defendants have been charged with assaulting or impeding law enforcemen­t officers on Jan. 6, according to the Justice Department. The FBI is posting videos and photos of violent, destructiv­e rioters in seeking the public’s help in identifyin­g other culprits.

Investigat­ors have used facial recognitio­n sotware, license plate readers and other high-tech tools to track down some suspects. Networks of online sleuths have helped the FBI identify rioters based on digital clues. Among those still on the lam: the person who put two explosives outside the offices of the Republican and Democratic national commitees before the riot. The FBI, the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives and the Metropolit­an Police Department are offering a $500,000 reward for informatio­n leading to an arrest and conviction. Authoritie­s have shared a staggering amount of evidence with defence lawyers — more than nine terabytes of informatio­n that would take over 100 days to view. The shared files include thousands of hours of surveillan­ce footage from the Capitol and hundreds of hours of bodycam videos from police officers who tried to hold off the mob. Nearly 500 people have pleaded guilty to riot-related charges, typically hoping that cooperatin­g could lead to a lighter punishment. About three-quarters of them pleaded guilty to misdemeano­rs in which the maximum sentence was either six months or one year behind bars. More than 100 of them have pleaded guilty to felony charges punishable by longer prison terms.

The first person to plead guilty to a Jan. 6-related crime was Jon Ryan Schaffer, an Indiana musician who joined the Oath Keepers. Schaffer was one of at least eight Oath Keepers who pleaded guilty before the group’s founder, Stewart Rhodes, and other members went to trial on seditious conspiracy charges.

The Justice Department also cut plea deals with several Proud Boys members, securing their cooperatio­n to build a case against former national leader Enrique Tarrio and other top members of the group. A New York man, Mathew Greene, was the first Proud Boys member to plead guilty to conspiring with others to stop Congress from certifying the Electoral College vote.

Dozens of riot defendants have elected to let juries or judges decide their fates. For the most part, they haven’t fared well at trial. The Justice Department notched a high-stakes victory in November when a jury convicted Rhodes, the Oath Keepers’ founder, and a Florida chapter leader of seditious conspiracy. It was the first seditious conspiracy conviction at trial in decades. Jurors acquited three other Oath Keepers associates of the Civil War-era charge, but convicted them of other felony offenses.

The next major milestone is the sedition trial of Tarrio and four other members of the Proud Boys. Jury selection in the trial of the far-right extremist group started last month.

In other cases, an Ohio man who stole a coat rack from the Capitol testified that he was acting on orders from Trump when he stormed the Capitol. A New Jersey man described by prosecutor­s as a Nazi sympathize­r claimed he didn’t know that Congress met at the Capitol. A retired New York Police Department officer testified that he was defending himself when he tackled a police officer and grabbed his gas mask outside the Capitol. Those defences fell flat. Jurors unanimousl­y convicted all three men of every charge in their respective indictment­s. Federal juries have convicted at least 22 people of Jan. 6 charges. Judges have convicted an additional 24 riot defendants ater hearing and deciding cases without a jury.

Only one person, New Mexico resident Matthew Martin, has been acquited of all charges ater a trial. Ater hearing testimony without a jury, US District Judge Trevor Mcfadden concluded that it was reasonable for Martin to believe that outnumbere­d police officers allowed him and others to enter the Capitol through the Rotunda doors on Jan. 6. At least 362 riot defendants were sentenced by the end of 2022. Roughly 200 of them have received terms of imprisonme­nt ranging from seven days to 10 years. Prosecutor­s had recommende­d a jail or prison sentence in approximat­ely 300 of those 362 cases. Retired New York Police Department Officer Thomas Webster has received the longest prison sentence. U.S. District Judge Amit Mehta, who sentenced Webster to a decade in prison, also presided over the first Oath Keepers sedition trial and will sentence Rhodes and Rhodes’ convicted associates. Webster is one of 34 riot defendants who has received a prison sentence of at least three years. More than half of them, including Webster, assaulted police officers at the Capitol. The riot resulted in more than $2.7 million in damage. So far, judges have ordered roughly 350 convicted rioters to collective­ly pay nearly $280,00 in restitutio­n. More than 100 rioters have been ordered to pay over $241,000 in total fines.

Judges also have ordered dozens of rioters to serve terms of home detention ranging from two weeks to one year — usually instead of jail time — and to collective­ly perform more than 14,000 hours of community service.

 ?? File/associated Press ?? Violent insurrecti­onists loyal to President Donald Trump storm the Capitol, on Jan. 6, 2021, in Washington.
File/associated Press Violent insurrecti­onists loyal to President Donald Trump storm the Capitol, on Jan. 6, 2021, in Washington.

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