Albuquerque Journal

Cowboys for Trump leader released from jail pending trial

Judge said that he did not carry weapons or commit violence Jan. 6

- BY MORGAN LEE

SANTA FE — Cowboys for Trump founder Couy Griffin is headed home to New Mexico after nearly three weeks in a Washington jail, after a judge on Friday said she will trust Griffin to show up for trial in connection with the Jan. 6 siege on the U.S. Capitol.

U.S. District Court Chief Judge Beryl Howell on Friday reversed a magistrate judge’s prior detention order that described Griffin as a flight risk.

Griffin denies federal charges that he knowingly entered barricaded areas of the Capitol grounds with the intent to disrupt government as Congress considered Electoral College results.

Continued incarcerat­ion pending trial might leave Griffin in jail for longer than the one-year maximum sentence amid pandemic-related court delays, Howell said.

Griffin is banned from visiting Washington outside of court proceeding­s, must surrender his passport and must not possess a firearm.

More than 150 people have been charged in federal court with crimes following the Jan. 6 riot.

In releasing Griffin, the judge said she weighed Griffin’s unrepentan­t appearance among the riotous crowd at the Capitol, and vows to return and plant a flag on House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s desk against his apparently candid subsequent interactio­ns with the FBI and no obvious disdain toward the judiciary. She noted repeatedly that Griffin on Jan. 6 did not carry weapons, commit violence or enter the U.S. Capitol.

“I appreciate that the charge here is that he disregarde­d signage about restricted areas of the Capitol on Jan. 6. But his subsequent cooperatio­n with law enforcemen­t showed that he is not a person who has a categorica­l disdain and disregard for any and every government act or authority,” Howell said.

Griffin, an Otero County commission­er, has led the Cowboys for Trump group in horseback parades through cities across the country in support of Donald Trump.

Griffin was arrested Jan. 17 in Washington — days after announcing during a public meeting in Alamogordo that he would

return to Washington with guns at the ready in opposition to Biden’s election and inaugurati­on.

Griffin and his attorneys say the guns were a selfdefens­e precaution against recent death threats — and that he ultimately left them with friends from Pennsylvan­ia.

Prosecutor­s say Griffin is a flight risk because he has advocated the violent overthrow of the U.S. government on multiple occasions. A magistrate judge noted

Griffin’s history of threatenin­g comments, racial invective, access to firearms and vows that Biden would never be president.

Howell had a different take, saying that Griffin’s status as an elected official in New Mexico with child support obligation­s weigh against continued incarcerat­ion.

“There doesn’t seem to be any evidence that he poses a risk of danger to the community in New Mexico,” she said.

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Couy Griffin

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