Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Rioter who sat in Pence’s chair gets prison time

California man takes plea deal of 42 months

- By Sean Emery

A 24-year-old Costa Mesa, California, man who sat in former Vice President Mike Pence’s vacated seat while storming the U.S. Capitol during the Jan. 6 insurrecti­on was sentenced Wednesday to three and a half years in prison.

Christian Alexander Secor — a former UCLA student who founded a conservati­ve organizati­on on the campus — accepted a plea deal earlier this year requiring he admit to a felony count of obstructin­g an official proceeding in return for the dismissal of other charges, such as assaulting, resisting, impeding officers and civil disorder.

In a 2020 Election Day text cited by prosecutor­s in court documents, Secor wrote “We’re going to win bigly and if we don’t we’re taking this ship down in flames,” following up a day later by writing, “They’re cheating. Trump will pull through by legal or illegal means.”

On Jan. 5, 2021, Secor traveled to Washington D.C., messaging another person on the way that he had “brought a gas mask” because he “expect(s) (expletive) to go sideways.”

A day later, Secor attended a “Stop the Steal” rally headlined by then-president Donald Trump before joining a mob in marching on the Capitol building, where congressio­nal leaders were in the process of certifying Joe Biden’s electoral victory.

Secor entered the Senate building as a rioter with a bullhorn and shouted “They can’t stop us all!” Other members of the crowd chanted “Take it back! Take it back!” according to court documents.

While in the Capitol building, Secor joined a crowd that overpowere­d three Capitol police officers and forced open doors. He eventually made his way to the Senate floor, where he sat in a seat that had been occupied by Pence, who had been forced to evacuate the building a half-hour earlier.

After leaving the building, Secor boasted on Twitter that “One day accomplish­ed more for conservati­sm than the last 30 years.” Two days later, Secor deleted his Twitter account.

Secor’s attorney, Brandi Harden, wrote in a sentencing brief that Secor “will forever regret” his decision to enter the Capitol, adding that his life since has been “turned upside down.”

“At the time of his trip to Washington D.C., he had become disillusio­ned by the hysteria about a stolen election coming from social media and news channels,” the defense attorney wrote. “Christian initially intended to attend the ‘Save America’ rally because he thought it was a protest about the 2020 election. He never set out to assault anyone or to participat­e in a riot.”

More than 800 people nationwide have been arrested in connection with the Jan. 6 insurrecti­on.

More than 400 defendants have pleaded guilty to criminal charges, the bulk of whom admitted to misdemeano­r counts.

 ?? U.S. Attorney’s Office ?? A man identified as Christian Secor is seen in the U.S. Capitol during the unrest on Jan. 6, 2021. Secor admitted to a felony count of obstructin­g an official proceeding.
U.S. Attorney’s Office A man identified as Christian Secor is seen in the U.S. Capitol during the unrest on Jan. 6, 2021. Secor admitted to a felony count of obstructin­g an official proceeding.

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