USA TODAY International Edition

Judge gives 54 months to rioter in Pelosi’s office

Ex- firefighter Richard Barnett put feet on desk

- Bart Jansen USA TODAY

WASHINGTON – A federal judge sentenced Richard “Bigo” Barnett, one of the most infamous Capitol rioters, on Wednesday to 54 months in prison after he was photograph­ed putting his feet up on a desk in House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s suite of offices and jotted her an insulting note in which he referred to her as a “biotch.”

U. S. District Judge Christophe­r Cooper basically split the difference between prosecutio­n and defense requests.

Prosecutor­s had sought a sentence of more than seven years.

But lawyers for Barnett, 63, a retired firefighter and bull rider from Gravette, Arkansas, argued for a sentence of up to one year, with credit for the four months he was jailed before trial.

Barnett was convicted in January of eight charges, including obstructin­g an official proceeding and entering a restricted building with a dangerous weapon.

The most serious of the charges carried a maximum 20- year sentence.

The hearing tested the severity of punishment for one of the highestpro­file defendants from the Jan. 6, 2021, attack, who carried a dangerous weapon but wasn’t charged with assaulting anyone.

One police officer’s body- worn camera recorded Barnett inside the Capitol.

“We’re in a war. Pick a side,” Barnett told police. “Don’t be on the wrong side; you’re going to get hurt.”

Here is what we know about the case:

‘ One of the best- known images of that day’

Barnett was one of 350 Capitol defendants convicted in the first two years after the riot.

He and Jacob Chansley, the QAnon shaman who wore face paint and a horned headpiece who was sentenced to 41 months in prison, were among the best- known rioters because of the attention given to their protests.

Barnett granted interviews after police forced him out of the Capitol, where he had been sprayed with chemicals.

He sold autographe­d pictures of himself sitting at the desk in Pelosi’s office.

“A photo of Barnett with his feet on a desk in the House Speaker’s office suite was widely circulated and became one of the best- known images of that day, symbolizin­g the rioters having wrested control of both the hallowed space and the political process from the nation’s elected leaders,” prosecutor­s said.

Barnett should receive a severe sentence to discourage domestic terrorism, “which the breach of the Capitol certainly was,” according to prosecutor­s.

But his lawyers said Barnett wasn’t violent and didn’t hurt anyone.

“Mr. Barnett did not engage in violence, did not assault police, did not destroy property and did not use a deadly weapon against another person,” his lawyers wrote.

Barnett entered the Capitol Rotunda about 2: 37 p. m. through the eastern Columbus Doors after another rioter opened the locked doors from the inside.

He made his way to Pelosi’s suite of offices and sat at the desk of Emily Beret, the speaker’s director of operations. He posed for pictures with his feet on the desk, holding an envelope with Pelosi’s franking signature on it and sticking out his tongue.

He left a note for the speaker: “Hey Nancy, Bigo was here you biotch,” he wrote.

‘ The gravity of Barnett’s conduct’ versus ‘ life sentence’

In the weeks before the riot, Barnett posted messages on Facebook including a digital flyer promoting “Operation Occupy the Capitol” and subtitled “Taking back our country from corrupt politician­s.”

“I ain’t going down easy,” he wrote in one post. “I came into this world kicking and screaming, covered in someone else’s blood. I’m not afraid to go out the same way,” he wrote in another post.

On Dec. 31, 2020, Barnett bought a ZAP Hike ‘ n Strike Hiking Staff, a stun device concealed in a walking stick that delivers 950,000 volts of electricit­y the manufactur­er testified “induces extreme pain,” and cannisters of pepper spray.

The hearing tested the severity of punishment for one of the highest- profile defendants from the Jan. 6, 2021, attack, who carried a dangerous weapon but wasn’t charged with assaulting anyone.

He also brought an American flag on a 10- pound flagpole.

He implored police to allow him to retrieve the flagpole he left behind in Pelosi’s office, but they refused to let him back in.

Barnett threatened to “make it real bad” for the officers blocking his path. Metro Police Officer Terrance Craig, who confronted Barnett, told investigat­ors he was concerned about his safety after Barnett lifted his sweater to reveal the Hike ‘ n Strike.

Outside the Capitol, Barnett gave interviews bragging about the “takeover” of Pelosi’s office and calling on others to continue fighting because “this is a war.”

The longest sentence so far in the Jan. 6 attack was 10 years, for a former police officer who assaulted cops outside the Capitol.

Prosecutor­s urged Cooper to give Barnett 87 months.

“An 87- month sentence reflects the gravity of Barnett’s conduct and the need to deter Barnett and others from obstructin­g the democratic process and dangerousl­y interferin­g with the police in pursuit of their political beliefs in the future,” prosecutor­s said.

Barnett’s lawyers argued such a harsh term “would be a life sentence,” given his age.

He lost his job and had to sell possession­s to pay living expenses.

His lawyers argued Barnett had no significant criminal history, with three drunken driving conviction­s each more than 20 years ago.

“The worst accusation­s against Mr. Barnett amounted to 20 minutes of nonviolenc­e in the Capitol, a stolen envelope and literally seconds of verbal altercatio­n with a police officer,” his lawyers said.

 ?? SAUL LOEB/ AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES FILE ?? Richard Barnett sits in the office of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D- Calif., as he protested inside the Capitol in Washington.
SAUL LOEB/ AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES FILE Richard Barnett sits in the office of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D- Calif., as he protested inside the Capitol in Washington.

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