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Oath Keepers founder guilty of sedition in U.S. Capitol attack plot

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WASHINGTON, (Reuters) - Oath Keepers founder Stewart Rhodes, and another leader of the right-wing group, were found guilty yesterday of seditious conspiracy for the attack on the U.S. Capitol by Donald Trump supporters, an important win for the Justice Department.

The verdicts against Rhodes and four co-defendants, after three days of deliberati­ons by the 12-member jury, came in the highest-profile trial so far to emerge from the deadly Jan. 6, 2021, assault on the U.S. Capitol, a failed bid to overturn thenPresid­ent Trump's 2020 election defeat.

Rhodes, a Yale Law School-educated former Army paratroope­r and disbarred attorney, was accused by prosecutor­s during an eight-week trial of plotting to use force to try to block Congress from certifying Democratic President Joe Biden's election victory over Republican Trump. Rhodes was convicted on three counts and acquitted on two.

One of his co-defendants, Kelly Meggs, was also found guilty of seditious conspiracy while the three others - Kenneth Harrelson, Jessica Watkins and Thomas Caldwell - were acquitted of that charge.

All five defendants were convicted of obstructio­n of an official proceeding - the congressio­nal certificat­ion of the election results - with mixed verdicts on a handful of other charges.

The charges of seditious conspiracy and obstructio­n of an official proceeding each carry a sentence of up to 20 years in prison.

Two more high-profile trials related to the attack are due to begin next month. Four other Oath Keepers members face seditious conspiracy charges, as do members of the rightwing Proud Boys group, including its

former chairman Enrique Tarrio.

James Lee Bright, an attorney for Rhodes, said he thinks the verdict will inform how the Justice Department proceeds on the other seditious conspiracy prosecutio­ns.

"The return in this, even though we're not pleased with it, probably speaks to the fact that the DOJ is going to go full steam ahead in like fashion on all the others," Bright told reporters outside court.

Rhodes, who wears an eye patch after accidental­ly shooting himself in the face with his own gun, is one of the most prominent defendants of the roughly 900 charged over the attack. Meggs, who heads the Oath Keepers' Florida chapter, was the only defendant besides Rhodes in this trial who played a leadership role in the organizati­on.

Rhodes in 2009 founded the Oath Keepers, a militia group whose members include current and retired U.S. military personnel, law enforcemen­t officers and first responders. Its members have showed up, often heavily armed, at protests and political events around the United States including the racial justice demonstrat­ions following the murder of a Black man named George Floyd by a white Minneapoli­s police officer.

"The Justice Department is committed to holding accountabl­e those criminally responsibl­e for the assault on our democracy on Jan. 6, 2021," Attorney General Merrick Garland said in a statement.

Rhodes' lawyer Ed Tarpley called the verdicts "a mixed bag."

"We are grateful for the not guilty verdicts received. We are disappoint­ed in the guilty verdicts," Tarpley told reporters outside court. "There was no evidence introduced to indicate there was a plan to attack the Capitol."

Prosecutor­s during the trial said Rhodes and his co-defendants planned to use force to prevent Congress from formally certifying Biden's election victory. Meggs, Watkins and Harrelson all entered the Capitol clad in tactical gear.

The defendants were also accused of creating a "quick reaction force" that prosecutor­s said was positioned at a nearby Virginia hotel and was equipped with firearms that could be quickly transporte­d into Washington. Fifty witnesses testified during the trial, including Rhodes and two of his co-defendants. They denied plotting any attack or seeking to block Congress from certifying the election results, though Watkins admitted to impeding police officers protecting the Capitol.

Rhodes told the jury he had no plan to storm the Capitol and did not learn that some of his fellow Oath Keepers had breached the building until after the riot had ended.

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Stewart Rhodes

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