Springfield News-Sun

Oath Keepers jury sent home for long weekend

- By Michael Kunzelman and Lindsay Whitehurst

WASHINGTON — Jurors have gone home for the long Thanksgivi­ng weekend after deliberati­ng most of Tuesday in the Jan. 6 Capitol riot case accusing Oath Keepers founder Stewart Rhodes and four of his extremist group associates of a violent plot to stop the transfer of presidenti­al power from Republican Donald Trump to Democrat Joe Biden.

Federal prosecutor­s are asking the jury to convict the defendants of seditious conspiracy — a rarely used charge that carries up to 20 years in prison and can be difficult to prove.

The jury began deliberati­ng Tuesday after final arguments wound up late Monday.

Prosecutor­s spent weeks showing jurors messages, recordings and surveillan­ce video they say show Rhodes, of Granbury, Texas, and his band of antigovern­ment extremists were prepared to take up arms to overturn Biden’s election victory over Trump.

Rhodes and two of his co-defendants — Thomas Caldwell of Berryville, Virginia, and Jessica Watkins, a Champaign County resident from Woodstock, Ohio — took the witness stand and sought to downplay their actions and portray the riot as a spontaneou­s outpouring of election-fueled rage instead of the result of a preconceiv­ed plot.

The others on trial are Kelly Meggs of Dunnellon, Florida, and Kenneth Harrelson of Titusville, Florida. Besides seditious conspiracy, all five defendants face other felony charges. If found guilty of seditious conspiracy, they would be the first defendants convicted of the Civil War-era offense at trial in nearly 30 years. The last successful case was the prosecutio­n of Islamic militants who plotted to bomb New York City landmarks.

The defendants also face several other charges, including conspiracy to obstruct an official proceeding — Congress’ certificat­ion of Biden’s 2020 election win.

Rhodes told jurors there was no plan for the Oath Keepers to attack the Capitol and said his followers who went inside acted “stupid.”

The jury will weigh the charges that the Oath Keepers were not whipped into an impulsive frenzy by Trump on Jan. 6, 2021, but traveled to Washington intent on stopping the transfer of presidenti­al power.

The riot was the opportunit­y they had been preparing for, prosecutor­s say. Rhodes’ followers sprang into action, marching to the Capitol, joining the crowd pushing into the building and attempting to overturn the election that was sending Biden to the White House in place of Trump.

Not true, the Oath Keepers argue. They say there was never any plot, that prosecutor­s have twisted their admittedly bombastic words and given jurors a misleading timeline of events and messages.

Hundreds of people have been convicted in the deadly attack, which left dozens of officers injured, sent lawmakers running for their lives and shook the foundation­s of American democracy. Now jurors in the case against Rhodes and his associates, for the first time, will need to decide whether the actions of any Jan. 6 defendants amount to seditious conspiracy — a charge that carries significan­t prison time and political weight.

Failure to secure a seditious conspiracy conviction could spell trouble for another high-profile trial beginning next month, of former Proud Boys national chairman Enrique Tarrio and other leaders of that extremist group.

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