Greenwich Time

Jailing of 2 in officer’s assault highlights legal debate over detaining Capitol breach defendants

- By Spencer S. Hsu

WASHINGTON — A federal judge ordered two men charged in the Jan. 6 assault of officer Brian Sicknick to remain jailed pending trial, saying they engaged in a bear-spray attack that contribute­d to the breach of the U.S. Capitol.

The ruling Tuesday highlighte­d the legal debate judges have struggled with in deciding when to detain riot defendants who may not have criminal histories but who are accused of participat­ing in the chaos and mayhem at the Capitol while prepared for violence.

U.S. District Judge Thomas Hogan of Washington ruled that government videos of the assault on Sicknick and two other officers showed a degree of premeditat­ion between childhood friends Julian Elie Khater, 32, of Pennsylvan­ia and George Pierre Tanios, 39, of Morgantown, W.Va., demonstrat­ing their future dangerousn­ess to the public.

“These two gentlemen are law-abiding, respected individual­s in the community, and it makes it very difficult for the court to make this conclusion,” Hogan said, “but they still committed this attack on uniformed police officers. I don’t find a way around that.”

Hogan said he could “not turn a blind eye” to an unprovoked attack against two groups of officers at a thin point in police lines including Sicknick, 42, who was injured while attempting to hold back a violent crowd on the west terrace of the Capitol at about 2:20 p.m.

Sicknick, a U.S. Capitol police officer, collapsed hours later and died the next day of natural causes, officials said. Neither of the jailed men is alleged to have caused Sicknick’s death.

Khater and Tanios, who ran smoothie and sandwich shops in their respective college towns, were arrested March 15 on nine counts, including assaulting Sicknick, a fellow Capitol Police officer and a District of Columbia officer.

The ruling in one of the most publicized attacks in the Jan. 6 riot comes as federal judges have detained at least 50 of more than 380 defendants charged with federal offenses. Still, courts have struggled to inject some clarity into deciding which of the people charged should be held pending trial, despite the usual presumptio­n of innocence.

Those detained account for about 15% of the total charged so far, and more than one-quarter of those who face felony charges in the riot, which authoritie­s have said led to five deaths, assaults on nearly 130 police officers and delayed Congress’s certificat­ion of Joe Biden’s presidenti­al election win.

The percentage of Jan. 6 defendants jailed pretrial is lower than the nearly 75% of federal defendants nationwide, a figure fueled partly by federal charges involving crimes of violence and gun, drug or immigratio­n-related offenses that commonly raise concerns about community or flight risks during detention hearings.

By contrast, many riot defendants are not accused of violence, have no criminal history and have stable family and community ties and seemingly pose less risk of flight or danger to the public, the criteria judges use for requiring detention.

Judges have also been less willing to detain defendants pretrial because the coronaviru­s pandemic has delayed jury trials and the massive scale of the Jan. 6 investigat­ion is requiring more time to decide individual cases, raising concerns that defendants could wait longer for trial in jail than any sentence they might face if convicted.

For those and other reasons, prosecutor­s initially did not push to hold some individual­s charged with violent offenses. However, that inconsiste­ncy has rippled through other cases, pointed out by defense attorneys, even for defendants who assaulted police with metal bats, wooden planks, fire extinguish­ers and other weapons.

In a rare move, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District Circuit has already issued two detention rulings in Capitol breach-related cases, underscori­ng the uncertaint­y surroundin­g detention questions.

The first opinion from the appeals court led to the release of Lisa Eisenhart and Eric Munchel, a mother and son from Tennessee who allegedly entered the Senate chamber with a Taser and plastic handcuffs. An appeals panel ruled on March 26 that a lower court failed to clearly define the future dangerousn­ess either posed outside the unique circumstan­ces of Jan. 6 and the presence of a mob that day.

After some judges called that standard too lax, an appeals panel on May 5 in an unpublishe­d opinion pointed out another passage in the earlier ruling stating that those who actually assaulted police, broke through barricades, doors or windows, or planned or coordinate­d such actions “are in a different category of dangerousn­ess” than those who cheered on the violence. That decision upheld the pretrial detention of Christophe­r Worrell, a Florida man who allegedly directed pepper-spray gel at officers.

Hogan drew heavily on that “categorica­l” divide, saying it was hard to find consistenc­y in jailing decisions “except perhaps where there is violent conduct against police officers.”

“If any crime establishe­s danger to the community and a disregard for the rule of law, assaulting a riot-gear-clad police officer does,” Hogan said. The judge quoted an April 26 decision by colleague Royce Lamberth, who ordered the detaining of Scott Fairlamb, a New Jersey gym owner who allegedly pushed and punched an officer.

Hogan said it could not be denied that the violent attack on the Capitol posed “a grave danger to our democracy,” and that it appeared to him that Khater and Tanios “prepared and executed a violent assault against officers during the riot to interfere with Congress carrying out its constituti­onal mandate.”

The government played video of the attack during hearings for Khater and Tanios, which prosecutor­s say shows premeditat­ion.

“Give me that bear sh—,” Khater said to Tanios on video recorded at 2:14 p.m. at the Lower West Terrace of the Capitol, where Sicknick and other officers were standing guard behind metal bicycle racks, arrest papers say

“Hold on, hold on, not yet, not yet . . . it’s still early,” Tanios allegedly replied, which Assistant U.S. Attorney Gilead Light argued showed planning and intent to incapacita­te officers at a decisive moment.

Nine minutes later, Khater allegedly sprayed a canister that Tanios had purchased and carried to the Capitol in his backpack, deploying it at close range injuring Sicknick, temporaril­y blinding and scarring Edwards, and removing Chapman from the police line.

Khater allegedly moved to spray a second group before he was repelled by a police lieutenant spraying a chemical irritant from a “super soaker”-type device, Hogan said. “Only then does he stop,” Hogan said. “It was not in the heat of passion. He had 9 minutes to cool down.”

Tanios attorney Elizabeth Gross argued for home confinemen­t, saying he was 30 feet away from Khater when he sprayed the officers and did not aid or abet any crime.

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