Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

‘White supremacis­t’ gets 4 months in jail

Man wore monitoring device during 1/6 riot

- By Michael Kunzelman

A Maryland man described by the FBI as a “self-professed” white supremacis­t was sentenced to four months of incarcerat­ion for storming the U.S. Capitol while wearing a court-mandated device that tracked his movements, court records show.

U.S. District Judge Timothy Kelly also sentenced Bryan Betancur to one year of supervised release after his term of imprisonme­nt and ordered him to pay $500 in restitutio­n.

Betancur, 22, was on probation for a 2019 burglary conviction when he traveled from the Washington suburb of Silver Spring, Maryland, and joined the mob that attacked the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021. A Gps-enabled monitoring device that he was wearing under the terms of his probation showed that he spent roughly three hours in or around the Capitol that afternoon.

Betancur climbed scaffoldin­g outside the Capitol before helping other rioters remove furniture from a conference room, prosecutor­s said. They added the rioters likely used pieces of the furniture as weapons and projectile­s during a clash with police officers in a tunnel on the Lower West Terrace.

Betancur pleaded guilty in May to one count of entering and remaining in a restricted building or grounds, a misdemeano­r punishable by a maximum of one year behind bars. Prosecutor­s recommende­d sentencing Betancur to six months of incarcerat­ion, 12 months of supervised release, 60 hours of community service and $500 in restitutio­n.

Approximat­ely 850 people have been charged with federal crimes for their conduct on Jan. 6. Over 350 of them have pleaded guilty, mostly to misdemeano­rs, and over 230 have been sentenced. Dozens of Capitol riot defendants who pleaded guilty to misdemeano­r offenses have been sentenced to terms of imprisonme­nt ranging from seven days to five months.

Betancur lied to the FBI during an interview after his guilty plea, falsely stating that he only entered the Capitol for his safety, according to prosecutor­s. He told the FBI agent who interviewe­d him that he heard law enforcemen­t planned the Capitol riot and that it was an “inside job,” a prosecutor said.

Then-president Donald Trump spoke to a crowd of his supporters at the “Stop the Steal” rally before many of them walked over to the Capitol, where Congress was preparing to certify President Joe Biden’s 2020 election victory.

Images recovered from Betancur’s cellphone showed him in Washington with Proud Boys members on Dec. 12, 2020. Probation officers gave Betancur permission to visit the city that day and on Jan. 6, both times under the pretense that he was traveling with Gideon Internatio­nal to distribute Bibles.

Betancur told law enforcemen­t officers that he was a member of several white supremacy groups and said he wanted to run people over with a vehicle and kill people in a church, an FBI agent wrote in an affidavit.

“Betancur has voiced homicidal ideations, made comments about conducting a school shooting, and has researched mass shootings,” the affidavit said.

During the riot, he posed for a photograph with a Confederat­e battle flag while standing on the scaffoldin­g outside the Capitol.

In June 2022, a rider on a Metro train in the Washington area reported that Betancur harassed other passengers, yelling racial slurs and making racist statements about Black people, according to prosecutor­s. They said the rider also reported that Betancur held a folding knife as he left a Metro station. Police officers stopped Betancur but didn’t arrest him, prosecutor­s said.

Defense attorney Ubong Akpan said Betancur no longer belongs to any extremist group and shouldn’t be punished for his political beliefs.

“He should only be judged for his conduct in this case. He accepted responsibi­lity and is remorseful for his conduct,” Akpan wrote, requesting a sentence of one month in jail for Betancur.

Earlier Wednesday, a man who pleaded guilty to the same riot-related offense as Betancur was sentenced to two months of imprisonme­nt. U.S. District Judge Tanya Chutkan also sentenced Benjamin Larocca, 28, of Seabrook, Texas, to one year of supervised release and ordered him to perform 60 hours of community service and to pay a $2,000 fine.

Prosecutor­s recommende­d three months of imprisonme­nt for Larocca. They said he took videos and photograph­s that showed his “extreme indifferen­ce to the chaos and violence around him” on Jan. 6.

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