San Antonio Express-News (Sunday)

Capitol rioters’ social media posts influencin­g sentences

- By Michael Kunzelman

For many rioters who stormed the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, self-incriminat­ing messages, photos and videos that they broadcast on social media before, during and after the insurrecti­on are influencin­g even their criminal sentences.

Earlier this month, U.S. District Judge Amy Jackson read aloud some of Russell Peterson’s posts about the riot before she sentenced the Pennsylvan­ia man to 30 days imprisonme­nt. “Overall I had fun lol,” Peterson posted on Facebook.

The judge told Peterson that his posts made it “extraordin­arily difficult” for her to show him leniency.

“The ‘lol’ particular­ly stuck in my craw because, as I hope you’ve come to understand, nothing about January 6th was funny,” Jackson added. “No one locked in a room, cowering under a table for hours, was laughing.”

Among the biggest takeaways so far from the Justice Department’s prosecutio­n of the insurrecti­on is how large a role social media has played, with much of the most damning evidence coming from rioters’ own words and videos.

FBI agents have identified scores of rioters from

public posts and records subpoenaed from social media platforms. Prosecutor­s use the posts to build

cases. Judge now are citing defendants’ words and images as factors weighing in favor of tougher sentences.

As of Friday, more than 50 people have been sentenced for federal crimes related to the insurrecti­on. In at least 28 of those cases, prosecutor­s factored a defendant’s social media posts into their requests for stricter sentences, according to an Associated Press review of court records.

Many rioters used social media to celebrate the violence or spew hateful rhetoric. Others used it to spread misinforma­tion, promote baseless conspiracy theories or play down their actions. Prosecutor­s also have accused a few defendants of trying to destroy evidence by deleting posts.

Approximat­ely 700 people have been charged with federal crimes related to the riot. About 150 of them have pleaded guilty. More than 20 defendants have been sentenced to jail or prison terms or to time already served behind bars. Over a dozen others received home confinemen­t sentences.

Rioters’ statements, in person or on social media, aren’t the only considerat­ion for prosecutor­s or judges. Justice Department sentencing memos say defendants also should be judged by whether they engaged in any violence or damaged property, whether they destroyed evidence, how long they spent inside the Capitol, where they went inside the building and whether they have shown sincere remorse.

Prosecutor­s recommende­d probation for Indiana hair salon owner Dona Sue Bissey, but Judge Tanya Chutkan sentenced her to two weeks in jail for her participat­ion in the riot. The judge noted that Bisssey posted a screenshot of a Twitter post that read, “This is the First time the U.S. Capitol had been breached since it was attacked

by the British in 1814.”

“When Ms. Bissey got home, she was not struck with remorse or regret for what she had done,” Chutkan said. “She is celebratin­g and bragging about her participat­ion in what amounted to an attempted overthrow of the government.”

FBI agents obtained a search warrant for Andrew Ryan Bennett’s Facebook account after getting a tip that the Maryland man livestream­ed video from inside the Capitol. Two days before the riot, Bennett posted a Facebook message that said, “You better be ready chaos is coming and I will be in DC on 1/6/ 2021 fighting for my freedom!.”

Judge James Boasberg singled out that post as an “aggravatin­g” factor weighing in favor of house arrest instead of a fully probationa­ry sentence.

“The cornerston­e of our democratic republic is the peaceful transfer of power after elections,” the judge told Bennett. “What you and others did on January 6th was nothing less than an attempt to undermine that system of government.”

Judge Jackson gave Andrew Wrigley a history lesson before she sentenced the Pennsylvan­ia man to 18 months of probation. Wrigley posted a photo on social media of him holding a 1776 flag during the riot. The judge said the gesture didn’t honor the nation’s founders.

“The point of 1776 was to let the people decide who would rule them. But the point of the attack on the Capitol was to stop that from happening,“Jackson said. “The point of the attack on the Capitol was to subvert democracy, to substitute the will of the people with the will of the mob.”

 ?? Associated Press file photo ?? Rioters supporting President Donald Trump climb the west wall of the the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6.
Associated Press file photo Rioters supporting President Donald Trump climb the west wall of the the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6.

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