San Diego Union-Tribune

OATH KEEPERS LEADER ASKS FOR LENIENCY IN SEDITION SENTENCE

- BY SPENCER S. HSU Hsu writes for The Washington Post.

Attorneys for Stewart Rhodes urged a judge to sentence him to far less than the 25-year prison term sought by federal prosecutor­s for seditious conspiracy in the Jan. 6, 2021, Capitol attack — asking for a penalty of time served or roughly 16 months behind bars — citing his military service and his founding and leadership of the right-wing extremist group Oath Keepers.

In a Monday morning court filing, the attorneys emphasized that Rhodes volunteere­d for the Army in June 1983, completed Airborne school and was honorably discharged after suffering a spinal fracture in a low-altitude night jump in 1986. They emphasized his formation of the Oath Keepers in 2009, saying the group provided hurricane and other emergency relief, security in cities experienci­ng rioting, and protective details for VIPs during President Donald Trump’s rallies after the 2020 presidenti­al election.

“If the history and character of a man is to be judged by what he creates and how that organizati­on functions within and for the benefit of society, then it is imperative that the court give great deference to Mr. Rhodes for the 12 years of service and dedication of the Oath Keepers, as evinced through the organizati­on’s history of community involvemen­t and volunteeri­sm in times of natural disaster and civil unrest,” Rhodes’ attorneys Phillip A. Linder and James Lee Bright wrote.

The defense filing came after a Friday evening memo by prosecutor­s asking a federal judge to sentence Rhodes to 25 years in prison and eight followers to at least 10 years behind bars, in the first punishment­s to be handed down to defendants convicted of seditious conspiracy in the Capitol riot.

Rhodes and the others face sentencing starting later this month. Rhodes was arrested in January 2022 and will have served roughly 16 months at that point.

“Assisting fellow citizens in times of natural disasters, protecting them when under siege from rioters and upholding the United States Constituti­on are not ‘extreme’ ideals, they are American ideals,” Bright and Linder wrote, asking U.S. District Judge Amit Mehta to impose a sentence “sufficient but no greater than necessary” to achieve the law’s goals for sentencing.

Rhodes, a top deputy and four others were found guilty at trials in November and January of plotting to unleash political violence to prevent the Biden presidency, stashing a small arsenal of firearms at hotels in Northern Virginia before converging that afternoon at the East Capitol steps in military-style tactical gear.

Three other co-defendants were convicted of obstructin­g Congress as it met to confirm the results of the 2020 election, among other crimes. Both top offenses are punishable by up to 20 years in prison, but prosecutor­s asked the court to stack sentences for Rhodes, citing among other things an enhanced terrorism penalty for actions intended to intimidate or coerce the government.

Prosecutor­s called for “swift and severe” punishment for Rhodes, saying his group’s actions went far beyond the scope and magnitude of any other Jan. 6 defendants sentenced so far. They said Rhodes exploited his public influence in the anti-government extremist movement and mobilized people for political violence.

Rhodes and his co-defendants were the first accused of seditious conspiracy in the Capitol breach and the first to face trial and be convicted on any conspiracy charge in the massive Jan. 6 investigat­ion, which has resulted in more than 1,000 arrests and more than 650 conviction­s so far.

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