Albuquerque Journal

Judge: No bail for jailed Cowboys for Trump leader

- BY MORGAN LEE

A federal judge denied bail Monday to jailed Cowboys for Trump leader Couy Griffin as he awaits trial on a charge involving the Jan. 6 siege of the U.S. Capitol, describing Griffin as a flight risk who denies the legitimacy of the current U.S. government.

U.S. Magistrate Judge Zia Faruqui said Griffin’s behavior and statements suggest he might obstruct justice based on his presence in a riotous crowd outside the U.S. Capitol and insistence that the election was not won by President Joe Biden.

Faruqui ordered Griffin, an

Otero County commission­er and founder of a horsebackr­iding group that backs former President Donald Trump, held without bail pending a preliminar­y hearing on the charge that Griffin knowingly entered Capitol grounds with the intent to disrupt the government as Congress considered Electoral College results.

The misdemeano­r charge carries a maximum penalty of up to a year in prison and fines of $100,000.

Griffin has said he was swept by a crowd past barricades, but never went inside the Capitol. At one point, he appeared on a balcony and attempted to lead the crowd in prayer.

A public defender told the court Monday that Griffin was within his 1st Amendment right of free speech, did not have knowledge that he was entering a restricted area at the Capitol and has not shown disregard for the judicial branch of government that would make him a flight risk.

Faruqui said the clear purpose of the riot was to stop Vice President

Mike Pence and Congress from certifying the election, and that Griffin vowed to return to finish a job that was left undone.

Griffin was arrested Jan. 17 in Washington — days after announcing during a public meeting in Alamogordo that he would return to Washington in opposition to Biden’s election and inaugurati­on.

“These statements that he makes about blood running out of the Capitol, threats to members of Congress, stating that the only good Democrat is a dead Democrat, all of those things demonstrat­e to me history and characteri­stics that warrant and favor detention,” Faruqui said, paraphrasi­ng statements made by Griffin before and after the Capitol siege.

The judge also pushed back on the idea that Griffin was an observer, not a participan­t in the siege, telling Griffin: “You were in the thick of things.”

A defense attorney said Griffin has been released into the general jail population after a prolonged stint in solitary confinemen­t because he initially refused a coronaviru­s test.

Monday’s hearing was conducted remotely by telephone and video conference.

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Couy Griffin

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