Lodi News-Sentinel

QAnon Shaman gets 41 months in prison for storming the Capitol

- Dave Goldiner

A right-wing extremist known as the QAnon Shaman was sentenced to 41 months in prison Wednesday for storming the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6 in a horned headdress.

Jacob Chansley, the conspiracy theorist who brandished a 12-foot spear and left a threatenin­g note for Vice President Mike Pence, will stew behind bars for three years and five months — the most severe sentence meted out so far for the insurrecti­on.

“What you did was terrible. You made yourself the epitome of the riot,” U.S. District Court Judge Royce Lamberth told Chansley before imposing sentence in Washington, D.C.

Prosecutor­s described Chansley as “the flag-bearer” of the Jan. 6 insurrecti­on. The government had asked Lamberth, who was appointed by President Ronald Reagan, to impose a 51-month sentence.

Chansley pleaded guilty to a felony count of obstructin­g an official proceeding before Congress. During the riot, he took a seat in the Senate chamber that had just been occupied by Pence. Chansley left a note on the dais reading “It’s Only A Matter

of Time. Justice Is Coming!”

Chansley, 31, pleaded for mercy before being sentenced and expressed remorse for his role in the attack, which he said was inspired by former President Donald Trump.

The Arizona military veteran compared himself to Jesus Christ and Mahatma Gandhi in a rambling statement.

“I believe in law and order, and I believe in responsibi­lity, (so) I should do what Gandhi would do, and take responsibi­lity,” he said. “I hope that you see my heart and my desire to live the life of Christ or Gandhi.”

Lamberth appeared to take Chansley seriously. The judge even compared the selfservin­g statement by a man who marauded shirtless through the Capitol spewing obscenitie­s to “the kind (of remarks) that Martin Luther King would say.”

The tough sentence is somewhat surprising because it is longer than the sentence also handed down by Lamberth to another Capitol rioter who attacked a cop, unlike Chansley.

It could set a precedent for stiffer sentences for other Capitol rioters accused of nonviolent offenses during the bloody attack.

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