Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

ARIZONA MAN offers regrets for storming Capitol, asks patience ‘for me and other peaceful people.’

- JACQUES BILLEAUD

PHOENIX — An Arizona man who participat­ed in the insurrecti­on at the U.S. Capitol while sporting face paint, no shirt and a furry hat with horns said he regrets storming the building, apologized for causing fear in others and expressed disappoint­ment with former President Donald Trump.

In a statement released late Monday through his attorney, defendant Jacob Chansley said he has reevaluate­d his life since being jailed for over a month on charges stemming from the Jan. 6 riot and realizes he shouldn’t have entered the Capitol building. Chansley, who previously said Trump inspired him to be in Washington that day, said Trump “let a lot of peaceful people down.”

Chansley said he’s coming to terms with events leading to the riot and asked people to “be patient with me and other peaceful people who, like me, are having a very difficult time piecing together all that happened to us, around us, and by us. We are good people who care deeply about our country.”

Chansley’s attorney, Al Watkins, released the statement before the second impeachmen­t trial of Trump began in the U.S. Senate.

Watkins, who unsuccessf­ully sought a pardon on Chansley’s behalf from Trump, said the Senate didn’t take up his offer to have his client testify on how he was incited by the former president.

The defense lawyer said his client’s apology wasn’t self-serving but rather a genuine expression of culpabilit­y. Still, he said he doesn’t think it’s right for the government to prosecute people who were incited.

“If you believe the government is correctly prosecutin­g the [former] president, you can’t at the same time hold criminally culpable those who were incited, because the people incited become victims,” Watkins said in an interview.

Chansley has pleaded innocent to felony charges of civil disorder and obstructin­g an official proceeding, plus four other misdemeano­r charges.

The U.S. Justice Department declined to comment Tuesday on Chansley’s apology.

Chansley was among hundreds of pro-Trump supporters who charged past police officers and stormed the Capitol as Congress was meeting to certify Joe Biden’s electoral win.

Authoritie­s say Chansley was one of the first people in the Capitol building, disobeyed orders by an officer to leave, refused the officer’s request to use Chansley’s bullhorn to tell rioters to leave the Senate chamber, and wrote a note to then-Vice President Mike Pence saying, “It’s only a matter of time, justice is coming.”

Prosecutor­s said a spear on top of a flagpole carried by Chansley was a weapon, though his attorney has characteri­zed the spear as an ornament.

Since being jailed, Chansley has had two instances in which he wasn’t eating because the detention facilities where he was being held didn’t serve organic food. He lost 20 pounds during the latest starvation episode. Chansley, who calls himself the “QAnon Shaman,” said he has been following such a diet for eight years while practicing Shamanism.

Last week, a judge ordered correction­s officials to provide Chansley with organic food. He was later moved to a jail in Virginia after the District of Columbia Department of Correction­s said it couldn’t honor the court’s order to feed him organic food.

 ?? (The New York Times/Erin Schaff) ?? Jacob Anthony Chansley, who calls himself the QAnon Shaman, joins other supporters of President Donald Trump in confrontin­g U.S. Capitol police officers during the Jan. 6 riot. In a statement, Chansley asked people to “be patient with me and other peaceful people who, like me, are having a very difficult time piecing together all that happened to us, around us, and by us. We are good people who care deeply about our country.”
(The New York Times/Erin Schaff) Jacob Anthony Chansley, who calls himself the QAnon Shaman, joins other supporters of President Donald Trump in confrontin­g U.S. Capitol police officers during the Jan. 6 riot. In a statement, Chansley asked people to “be patient with me and other peaceful people who, like me, are having a very difficult time piecing together all that happened to us, around us, and by us. We are good people who care deeply about our country.”

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