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The Justice Department said Sunday that the Secret Service and the FBI are investigating the incident in Coachella, California, about a quarter-mile from the rally venue. A Secret Service official said in a statement: "We were contacted as it happened and Secret Service agents conducted a productive intelligence interview. Asked about the arrest, a Trump campaign official appeared unaware of the incident. On July 13, a gunman hit Trump in the ear and fatally shot a man at a campaign rally in Butler, Pennsylvania. He said the entry process also included getting past metal detectors at a Secret Service pedestrian checkpoint at the entrance.
Persons: Donald Trump, Trump, Martin Estrada, Riverside County Sheriff Chad Bianco, Bianco, Mario Tama, Vem Miller, Miller, Kamala Harris, Andy Abeyta, Organizations: The Justice Department, Service, FBI, Secret, Riverside, Riverside County Sheriff, Empire Polo Club, Coachella Valley Music & Arts Festival, Secret Service, Trump, Republican, Trump International Golf Club Locations: Coachella , California, U.S, Central California, Riverside County, Indio, Coachella, Coachella , Calif, Las Vegas, California, Butler , Pennsylvania, West Palm Beach , Florida, Calif, USA
download the appSign up to get the inside scoop on today’s biggest stories in markets, tech, and business — delivered daily. Read previewA pilot calling himself a "free citizen" is accused of almost causing a midair crash after taking off in the direction of landing planes, federal investigators say. The federal indictment said that Marsan pointed his Piper Cherokee against the flow of landing air traffic. Statements like this are hallmarks of the Sovereign Citizen movement, according to the Anti-Defamation League, although the indictment has not identified him as such. In court, Marsan said that he didn't consider himself the defendant, according to the Anchorage Daily News.
Persons: , William Brian Marsan, Warren, Bud, Marsan, Piper, didn't, commenter Organizations: Service, FAA, Palmer, Airport, Business, Sovereign Citizen, Defamation League, Southern Poverty Law, Anchorage Daily News, Sound Aviation, Anchorage . Locations: Palmer , Alaska, Anchorage
CNN —A federal judge on Wednesday blasted a convicted January 6 rioter for downplaying the US Capitol attack and using the kind of revisionist rhetoric that former President Donald Trump often uses on the campaign trial. “This cannot become normal… We cannot condone the normalization of the January 6 US Capitol riot,” US District Judge Royce Lamberth said while sentencing Taylor James Johnatakis to more than seven years in prison. He did not reference Trump by name while sentencing Johnatakis, but the comparisons were clear. According to evidence presented at trial, Johnatakis attended Trump’s rally on January 6 and then threatened to “break down doors” while marching toward the Capitol. He has been defiant about his actions, saying in a recent interview that “we did nothing” on January 6, and writing about the “injustice” that he and other Capitol riot defendants are facing behind bars.
Persons: Donald Trump, Royce Lamberth, Taylor James Johnatakis, Johnatakis, ” Trump, , , Martin Luther King Jr, Henry David Thoreau, ” Lamberth, Ronald Reagan, ” Johnatakis Organizations: CNN, Capitol, Trump, Sovereign, Prosecutors Locations: Washington ,
WASHINGTON (AP) — A man who stormed the U.S. Capitol with fellow Proud Boys extremist group members was sentenced on Wednesday to six years in prison after he berated and insulted the judge who punished him. The judge warned Bru that he could be kicked out of the courtroom if he continued to disrupt the proceedings. Prosecutors described Bru as one of the least remorseful rioters who assaulted the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021. He later joined other rioters inside the Capitol and entered the Senate gallery, where he flashed a hand gesture associated with the Proud Boys as he posed for selfie photos. He has “continued to spew disinformation” from jail since his re-arrest and trial, prosecutors said.
Persons: Marc Bru, James Boasberg, , Bru, , Prosecutors, , ” Bru, ” Prosecutors, Jan, Boasberg, “ Bru, Donald Trump's “ Organizations: WASHINGTON, U.S, Capitol, Boys, Prosecutors, Bru, Twitter, FBI, Police, The Associated Press Locations: Portland , Oregon, Washington ,, Washington, Peace, Portland, Vancouver , Washington, Idaho and Montana, Montana
Frank Rocco Giustino pleaded guilty in February to a misdemeanor charge related to the Jan. 6, 2021, riot at the Capitol. U.S. District Judge James Boasberg told Giustino that he seemed to have no remorse for his conduct on Jan. 6 or any respect for the court's authority. I think the U.S. marshal should come after you, not me,” Giustino told the judge, punctuating his rant with expletives directed at a prosecutor. Giustino pleaded guilty in February to parading, demonstrating or picketing in a Capitol building, a misdemeanor with a maximum sentence of six months of incarceration. Nearly 900 of them have pleaded guilty or been convicted by juries or judges after trials.
Persons: Trump, profanely, Frank Rocco Giustino, James Boasberg, Giustino, I've, , Prosecutors, “ We’re, ” Giustino, punctuating, expletives, Attorney Douglas Collyer, , ” Collyer, Joe Biden's, Organizations: WASHINGTON, U.S . Capitol, U.S, District, Capitol, Attorney, Facebook, Trump, Republican, Washington , D.C Locations: York, U.S, Florida, Washington ,
The Paradox of Prosecuting Domestic Terrorism
  + stars: | 2023-02-08 | by ( James Verini | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +52 min
The preventive approach to domestic terrorism goes back even further than the 1990s and it begins with the basic police work and surveillance of the joint terrorism task forces. In fact, there is no section of the U.S. Criminal Code that criminalizes domestic terrorism as such. The absence of clear law around domestic terrorism, and the imperatives of prevention, mean that investigators and prosecutors who work domestic terrorism cases must focus on more common charges: weapons violations, illegal drug possession, burglary, aiding and abetting and so forth. But this was not enough to overrule the fear of domestic terrorism that was gripping the nation and that hung in the courtroom. It reflected the legal paradoxes of the case and domestic terrorism law in general or, maybe more accurately, the absence of it.
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