Times-Herald

Capitol rioter who breached Senate gets 8 months

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A Florida man who breached the U.S. Senate chamber carrying a Trump campaign flag was sentenced Monday to eight months behind bars, the first resolution for a felony case in the Capitol insurrecti­on.

Paul Allard Hodgkins apologized and said he was ashamed of his actions on Jan 6. Speaking calmly from a prepared text, he described being caught up in the euphoria as he walked down Washington's most famous avenue, then followed a crowd of hundreds into the Capitol.

"If I had any idea that the protest ... would escalate (the way) it did ... I would never have ventured farther than the sidewalk of Pennsylvan­ia Avenue," Hodgkins told the judge. He added: "This was a foolish decision on my part."

Prosecutor­s had asked for Hodgkins to serve 18 months behind bars, saying in a recent filing that he, "like each rioter, contribute­d to the collective threat to democracy" by forcing lawmakers to temporaril­y abandon their certificat­ion of Joe Biden's 2020 election victory over President Donald Trump and to scramble for shelter from incoming mobs.

In pronouncin­g the sentence, Judge Randolph Moss said that Hodgkins had played a role, if not as significan­t as others, in one of the worst episodes in American history. Still he chose to give Hodgkins a year less in prison.

"That was not, by any stretch of the imaginatio­n, a protest," Moss said. "It was … an assault on democracy." He added: "It left a stain that will remain on us … on the country for years to come."

The sentencing could set the bar for punishment­s of hundreds of other defendants as they decide whether to accept plea deals or go to trial. Hodgkins and others are accused of serious crimes but were not indicted, as some others were, for roles in larger conspiraci­es.

Under an agreement with prosecutor­s, he pleaded guilty last month to one count of obstructin­g an official proceeding, which carries a maximum 20-year prison sentence. In exchange, prosecutor­s agreed to drop lesser charges, including entering a restricted building and disorderly conduct.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Mona Sedky said that, while Hodgkins didn't engage in violence himself, he walked among many who did — in what she called "the ransacking of the People's House." And as he walked by smashed police barriers, he could see the smoke of tear gas and the chaos ahead of him.

"What does he do?" she asked the court. "He walks toward it. He doesn't walk away."

She added that Hodgkins was in the midst of a mob that forced lawmakers to seek shelter and some congressio­nal staffers to hide in fear, locked in officers as hundreds swept through the building. Those in fear for their lives that day will, she said, "bear emotional scars for many years — if not forever."

Hodgkins was never accused of assaulting anyone or damaging property.

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