Los Angeles Times

Capitol rioter gets more than five years in prison

The sentence matches the longest term handed down so far to a Jan. 6 defendant.

- By Michael Kunzelman Kunzelman writes for the Associated Press.

A man who attacked police officers with poles during the riot at the U.S. Capitol was sentenced Tuesday to more than five years in prison, matching the longest term of imprisonme­nt so far among hundreds of Capitol riot prosecutio­ns.

Mark Ponder, a 56-yearold resident of Washington, D.C., said he “got caught up” in the chaos that erupted on Jan. 6, 2021, and “didn’t mean for any of this to happen.”

“I wasn’t thinking that day,” Ponder told U.S. District Judge Tanya Chutkan, asking her for mercy before she sentenced him to five years and three months in prison.

That was three months longer than the prison sentence requested by prosecutor­s. And it’s the same sentence that Chutkan gave Robert Palmer, a Florida man who also pleaded guilty to assaulting police at the Capitol.

More than 200 Capitol riot defendants have been sentenced.

Chutkan said Ponder

was “leading the charge” against police officers trying to hold off the mob that disrupted Congress from certifying President Biden’s electoral victory.

“This is not ‘caught up,’ Mr. Ponder,” she said. “He was intent on attacking and injuring police officers. This was not a protest.”

Chutkan has consistent­ly taken a hard line in punishing Capitol rioters. She has handed down terms of imprisonme­nt to all 13 riot defendants who have come before her, matching or exceeding

the Justice Department’s sentencing recommenda­tion in every case, according to an Associated Press review of court records.

Prosecutor­s had recommende­d a five-year prison sentence for Ponder, who has been jailed since his arrest in March 2021.

In April, Ponder pleaded guilty to an assault charge punishable by a maximum sentence of 20 years in prison. Federal sentencing guidelines called for a prison term of nearly five years to

just under six years, but Chutkan wasn’t bound by those recommenda­tions.

More than 100 police officers were injured during the riot.

Defense attorney Joseph Conte said Ponder was “caught up in the madness that was Jan. 6.” Conte asked for a sentence below the guidelines’ range.

Ponder swung a pole at a police officer on the Capitol’s West Plaza, breaking it against the officer’s shield. After retreating into the crowd, Ponder grabbed a sturdier pole colored in red, white and blue stripes. He used it to assault two other officers, hitting one of them in the left shoulder, before police detained and handcuffed him.

Outnumbere­d officers released Ponder because they couldn’t get a police vehicle to transport him. They told him to leave the Capitol, but Ponder stayed and joined a mob of rioters clashing with police at a tunnel.

Capitol Police Sgt. Aquilino Gonell, one of the officers assaulted by Ponder, said the force of Ponder’s blow shattered his shield.

“It was horrific,” Gonell said during Ponder’s sentencing hearing. “That particular day will impact me for the rest of my life.”

After his arrest, Ponder told FBI agents that he typically supports police but viewed the officers as “part of the problem” that day.

“At some point in time, the way this country is going, you gonna have to pick a side,” he said, according to prosecutor­s.

Ponder attended the rally near the White House on Jan. 6 to hear then-President Trump’s speech and to “peacefully protest the results of the election and the lack of attention to alleged voting irregulari­ties,” Conte wrote in a court filing, referring to the falsehood that the election was tainted.

“He did so with no intent to do anything but add his voice to the vocal protests over the injustice he perceived had happened in the election,” the attorney said. “Unfortunat­ely, he got caught up in the riotous atmosphere of the crowd and erroneousl­y perceived the police as standing in the way of the crowd’s desire to protest the election results.”

Ponder has a criminal record spanning three decades, including a 2008 conviction for bank robbery, according to prosecutor­s.

More than 840 people have been charged with federal crimes for their conduct at the Capitol on Jan. 6. More than 350 defendants have pleaded guilty or been convicted by a jury or a judge.

More than 220 of them have been sentenced, including about 100 who received a term of imprisonme­nt. Ponder is the 15th to be sentenced to a prison term exceeding one year.

The prison sentences for Ponder and Palmer may soon be exceeded. Prosecutor­s are seeking a 15-year sentence for Guy Reffitt, a Texas man who was convicted of storming the Capitol with a holstered handgun. U.S. District Judge Dabney Friedrich is due to sentence Reffitt on Monday.

 ?? Department of Justice ?? MARK PONDER was captured by a police camera as he struck an officer at the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021. “I wasn’t thinking that day,” he told a judge Tuesday.
Department of Justice MARK PONDER was captured by a police camera as he struck an officer at the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021. “I wasn’t thinking that day,” he told a judge Tuesday.

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