Morning Sun

Man who threatened to shoot Pelosi gets prison

- By Tom Jackman

As Cleveland G. Meredith Jr., a devoted follower of the Qanon conspiracy theories, drove toward the nation’s capital from Colorado on Jan. 6 with a cache of guns, 2,500 rounds of ammunition and high-capacity magazines, he repeatedly texted his family and friends ominous sentiments. One message said he was “gonna collect a . . . ton of Traitors heads.”

When a family member responded that President Donald Trump wanted him to go home, Meredith strongly disagreed and said, “he wants HEADS and I’m gonna deliver.” Meredith didn’t arrive in Washington until late that night, but the next day he informed his family that he was considerin­g shooting both D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser, D, and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-calif., twice texting that he was considerin­g “putting a bullet in her [Pelosi’s] noggin on live TV.”

His family called the FBI. Meredith, 53, was arrested Jan. 7 in a D.C. hotel room and ordered held without bond. On Tuesday, after his sentencing range was increased by a judge for threatenin­g a government official and showing intent to carry out his threats, he was sentenced to 28 months in federal prison.

Meredith’s attorney had asked U.S. District Judge Amy Berman Jackson to sentence Meredith to the 11 months he has already served, and had expected his client to face a maximum of 21 months. Prosecutor­s had not sought a sentencing increase beyond a range of 18 to 24 months, but didn’t oppose it.

In a 50-minute analysis of Meredith’s case, Jackson pointedly read aloud every text message listed by prosecutor­s in a sentencing brief, many of them vulgar, to emphasize her view that “the level of discourse in this country has become so debased and degraded.” The judge said that Meredith truly was “strategizi­ng on best way to assault this city,” as he wrote in one text on Jan. 7.

“It is not patriotism,” the judge told Meredith, “it is not standing up for America and it is not justified to descend on the nation’s capital at the direction of a disappoint­ed candidate and threaten members of the other party. Canceling out the votes of others at the point of a gun is the utter antithesis of what America stands for, it is the definition of tyranny and authoritar­ianism.”

“I know what I did was wrong,” Meredith said. “It was political hyperbole that was too hyper . . . I’m very embarrasse­d about the whole situation. It’s not who I am and it’s not who I want to be remembered as.”

Meredith, who lives in Hayesville, N.C., is divorced and drove to Colorado in late December to spend time with his ex-wife and two sons, according to his sentencing memo. He also brought the boxes of ammunition, a handgun and a rifle, along with some all-terrain vehicles, to practice with his kids, his lawyers said. Jackson noted that 1,000 rounds of armor-piercing ammunition, an assault-style rifle with a telescopic scope and high-capacity magazines were probably not needed for target practice with children.

Starting on Jan. 4, Meredith began driving toward Washington with his weapons and his ATVS, which he said in some texts he might need to break through to the Capitol. “We’re gonna surround DC and slowly constrict,” Meredith wrote.

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