Los Angeles Times

Lower-level Oath Keepers sentenced for Capitol assault

Two antigovern­ment extremists express sorrow for actions in the 2021 insurrecti­on.

- By Lindsay Whitehurst Whitehurst writes for the Associated Press.

WASHINGTON — Two Florida men who stormed the U.S. Capitol with other members of the far-right Oath Keepers group were sentenced Friday to three years in prison for seditious conspiracy and other charges, the latest in a historic string of sentences in the Jan. 6. 2021, attack.

David Moerschel, 45, a neurophysi­ologist from Punta Gorda, and Joseph Hackett, a 52-year-old chiropract­or from Sarasota, were convicted in January alongside other members of the antigovern­ment extremist group for their roles in what prosecutor­s described as a violent plot to stop the transfer of power from former President Trump to President Biden after the 2020 election.

Both men were among the lower-level members charged with seditious conspiracy. Moerschel was sentenced to three years in prison, Hackett to three and a half years.

Nine people associated with the Oath Keepers have been tried for seditious conspiracy, and six were convicted of the rarely used Civil War-era charge in two separate trials.

The group’s founder, Stewart Rhodes, was sentenced last week to 18 years in prison, a record for a Jan. 6 defendant.

Three defendants were cleared of the sedition charge but found guilty of other Jan. 6 crimes.

Moerschel and Hackett helped amass guns and ammunition to stash in a Virginia hotel for a “quick reaction force” that could be quickly shuttled to Washington, prosecutor­s said. The weapons were never deployed.

Moerschel provided an AR-15 and a Glock semiautoma­tic handgun, and Hackett helped transport arms, prosecutor­s said.

On Jan. 6, both men dressed in paramilita­ry gear and marched into the Capitol with fellow Oath Keepers in a military-style line formation, charging documents stated.

“The security of our country and the safety of democracy should not hinge on the impulses of madmen,” Justice Department prosecutor Troy Edwards said.

Moerschel told the judge he was deeply ashamed of forcing his way into the Capitol and joining the riot that seriously injured police officers and sent staffers running in fear.

“When I was on the stairs, your honor, I felt like God said to me, ‘Get out here.’ And I didn’t,” he said in court, his voice cracking with emotion. “I disobeyed God, and I broke laws.”

Moerschel was a neurophysi­ologist who monitored surgical patients under anesthesia before his arrest. He has been fired and works in constructi­on and landscapin­g. A former missionary, he is married with three children.

Hackett said he remembered feeling horrified as he set foot in the Capitol.

“I truly am sorry for my part in causing so much misery,” he said.

He originally joined the group after seeing vandalism at a commercial area near his house during the summer of 2020, when protests against police brutality were common, his attorney Angela Halim said.

“He did not join this organizati­on because he shared any beliefs of Stewart Rhodes,” she said.

Still, he attended an “unconventi­onal warfare” training and, in the lead-up to Jan. 6, repeatedly warned other Oath Keepers about “leaks” and the need to secure their communicat­ions, authoritie­s have said.

“Taken together, his messages show he perceived the election as an existentia­l threat,” prosecutor Alexandra Hughes said.

How the chiropract­or and father ended up storming the Capitol, though, is “hard to wrap one’s head around,” said U.S. District Judge Amit Mehta. The group’s increasing­ly heated online conversati­ons and false claims of a stolen election “can suck you in like a vortex and make it very difficult to get out.”

Neither man was a top leader in the group, and both left shortly after Jan. 6. Both sentences were far lower than the 12 years prosecutor­s sought for Hackett and 10 for Moreschel.

Moreschel was in the Capitol for about 12 minutes and didn’t do anything violent or scream at police officers, Mehta said. He also handed his guns over to police.

“Sentencing shouldn’t be vengeful. It shouldn’t be such that it is unduly harsh simply for the sake of being harsh,” said the judge, who also imposed a three-year term of supervised release for both men.

Moerschel’s attorneys asked for home confinemen­t, arguing that he joined the Oath Keepers’ chats shortly before the riot and was not a leader.

“He was just in the back following the crowd,” attorney Scott Weinberg told the judge.

Defense attorneys have long said there was never a plan to attack the Capitol and that prosecutor­s’ case was largely built on online messages cherry-picked out of context.

The charges against leaders of the Oath Keepers and another far-right extremist group, the Proud Boys, are among the most serious brought in the Justice Department’s sprawling riot investigat­ion.

Prosecutor­s have won seditious conspiracy conviction­s in the case against former Proud Boys national chairman Enrique Tarrio and three other group leaders in what prosecutor­s said was a separate plot to keep Trump in the White House.

‘The security of our country and the safety of democracy should not hinge on the impulses of madmen.’

— Troy Edwards, Justice Department prosecutor

 ?? Andrew Harnik Associated Press ?? JOSEPH HACKETT, shown Jan. 23, has received 3 1⁄2 years in prison. David Moerschel got three years.
Andrew Harnik Associated Press JOSEPH HACKETT, shown Jan. 23, has received 3 1⁄2 years in prison. David Moerschel got three years.

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