Los Angeles Times

Alleged ‘antifa supporter’ sentenced to prison

Nikki Hubbard, 38, gets four years for her role in violence at a pro-Trump rally.

- By David Hernandez Hernandez writes for the San Diego Union-Tribune.

SAN DIEGO — A person prosecutor­s described as a supporter of antifascis­t groups was sentenced Thursday to four years in prison for being involved in a string of attacks in January 2021 during a San Diego rally organized by supporters of then-President Trump.

Nikki Hubbard, 38, pleaded guilty Sept. 28 in San Diego County Superior Court to conspiracy to riot, unlawful use of pepper spray and assault, and she agreed to the four-year term.

Hubbard, a transgende­r woman, has also used the name Nikki Yach. She is identified in court records by another name that the Union-Tribune is not using in this story because it is not used by Hubbard.

Hubbard also was sentenced in a separate case to eight months in custody after admitting that in October 2020 she violated a law that prohibits felons from entering the grounds of a state prison without the warden’s consent. She received credit for a year and nine months in custody.

Hubbard was one of 11 defendants indicted in June on 29 felony charges, including conspiracy to riot and assault-related charges. Prosecutor­s alleged that the defendants — whom they described as “antifa supporters” — came from the L.A. area and across San Diego County to counter the pro-Trump “Patriot March” in Pacific Beach on Jan. 9, 2021.

The defendants, dressed in black and with their faces covered, engaged in various attacks, prosecutor­s said. Some of the victims were pepper-sprayed. One was assaulted with a stun gun. Another was attacked with a flagpole and a lawn chair.

The case is believed to be the first in the nation in which prosecutor­s filed a conspiracy charge against an antifascis­t group.

The Center for Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies describes “antifa” — a term often used to describe the antifascis­t movement — as a “decentrali­zed network of far-left militants who oppose what they believe are fascist, racist, or otherwise right-wing extremists” and whose adherents “frequently blend anarchist and communist views.”

The charges in San Diego County drew scrutiny and criticism because reporters and bystanders documented violence carried out by participan­ts in the pro-Trump rally as well as counterpro­testers, but no one in the group of Trump supporters was charged.

The rally occurred just three days after Trump supporters stormed the U.S. Capitol. At least five participan­ts in the Pacific Beach rally were present during the Capitol attack, according to the Appeal, a nonprofit news organizati­on with a focus on criminal justice.

“Video evidence analysis shows that overwhelmi­ngly the violence in this incident was perpetrate­d by the antifa affiliates and was not a mutual fray with both sides crossing out of lawful 1st Amendment expression into riot and violence,” the San Diego County district attorney’s office said in a statement in December 2021.

Before Hubbard was sentenced, her husband told the court that she grew up in the foster care system and was once homeless.

“This is political and fascist nonsense,” Hubbard’s husband said of the case.

Outside the courtroom, GG Hubbard said his wife and others she was with went to the rally to protect the community against what she described as a violencepr­one group, referring to the pro-Trump organizers.

GG Hubbard also raised concerns about his wife’s placement in county jail, saying she has been held in a men’s cell.

The San Diego County Sheriff ’s Department, which runs the jail, said Hubbard is being held in a “safe and secure environmen­t” at the Vista Detention Facility, which houses both men and women.

“We have taken her requests into considerat­ion and have offered individual housing at [the women’s Las Colinas Detention and Reentry Facility], but she preferred to stay at Vista instead,” the department said.

Hubbard was booked into jail Dec. 30.

In May, Hubbard filed a declaratio­n in support of a lawsuit against the Sheriff ’s Department that aims to improve jail conditions, including medical treatment. Hubbard said in the document that she was booked into San Diego Central Jail and that the facility had denied her requests to be housed with women for various reasons, including her height.

Under Senate Bill 132, signed into law in 2020, transgende­r, nonbinary and intersex inmates at California state prisons have the right to be housed at either men’s or women’s facilities based on their preference.

Reporters and bystanders documented violence carried out by participan­ts in the pro-Trump rally as well as counterpro­testers, but no one in the group of Trump supporters was charged.

 ?? Nelvin C. Cepeda San Diego Union-Tribune ?? SAN DIEGO police are deployed at a pro-Trump rally on Jan. 9, 2021. Some of the rally participan­ts had been present at the U.S. Capitol attack three days earlier.
Nelvin C. Cepeda San Diego Union-Tribune SAN DIEGO police are deployed at a pro-Trump rally on Jan. 9, 2021. Some of the rally participan­ts had been present at the U.S. Capitol attack three days earlier.

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