The first Proud Boys leaders to seek Capitol riot pardons are instead asking Trump directly.
Meanwhile, the Proud Boys want out now, and presidents have the Constitutional power to grant immediate pardons, Biggs attorney Norm Pattis said in a 10-page letter sent to Trump on Wednesday.
Two years ago, Biggs and his Proud Boys codefendants had struck a different tone regarding Trump, arguing at trial that he incited the Capitol riot and that the Proud Boys were only following his orders.
Advertisement"Mr. President, you are no stranger to prosecutions warped by partisan vendetta," the Biggs pardon letter says.
Former Proud Boys chairman Enrique Tarrio will also "explore every possible avenue" toward early release, his lawyer, Nayib Hassan, said in a press statement last week.
Persons:
Trump, —, Donald Trump, Joseph Biggs, Matt Gaetz, Tarrio, Gaetz, pic.twitter.com, gGPeTLtWmv, Biggs, Norm Pattis, Pattis, codefendants, Enrique Tarrio, Nayib Hassan, Zachary Rehl, Dominic Pezzola, Prosecutors, Pezzola, Mike Pence
Organizations:
Boys, Service, Department of Justice, Justice Department, Proud, Manhattan, Trump, Justice, DOJ, Capitol, Proud Boys, Tarrio, Rehl, Capitol Police
Locations:
Trump, Florida, Afghanistan, Iraq, Washington ,, Philadelphia, Rochester , New York