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WASHINGTON (AP) — Hundreds of rioters have been charged, convicted and sentenced for joining the mob attack on the U.S. Capitol. There is no public record of a conviction or a sentence in Lazar's court docket. Lazar was sentenced in Washington’s federal court on March 17 to 30 months in prison, according to the Bureau of Prisons, but there’s no public record of such a hearing. Questions about Lazar’s case have been swirling for months, but the details of his conviction and sentence have not been previously reported. The judge overseeing Lazar’s case in May rejected a request from media outlets — including the AP — to release any sealed records that may exist.
Persons: Samuel Lazar's, , Lazar, Donald Trump, Fort Dix —, George Papadopoulos, Trump, Robert Mueller, Papadopoulos, George Washington, Randall Eliason, Eliason, Defendants, ” Eliason, “ Let’s, , Robin Meriweather, , Amy Berman Jackson, he’s, Judge Jackson, ” Jackson, ” ___ Richer, Eric Tucker Organizations: WASHINGTON, U.S . Capitol, Capitol, of Prisons, Associated Press, Department, AP, Justice Department, Fort Dix, Bureau of Prisons, FBI, George, George Washington University, ” U.S, NBC, Lancaster Locations: Ephrata , Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Russia, Washington, , Washington ,, U.S, Boston
Shroyer hosts a daily show called “The War Room With Owen Shroyer” for the website operated by conspiracy theorist Alex Jones. Shroyer didn't need to set foot inside the Capitol because many of his followers did, prosecutors argued. Political Cartoons View All 1154 Images“Shroyer helped create January 6,” prosecutors wrote in a court filing. Outside the Capitol, Shroyer stood in front of a crowd with a megaphone and yelled, “The Democrats are posing as communists, but we know what they really are: they’re just tyrants, they’re tyrants. Shroyer is one of two Infowars employees arrested on Capitol riot charges.
Persons: , Owen Shroyer, , Owen Shroyer ”, Alex Jones, Shroyer, Donald Trump, Shroyer didn’t, , Prosecutors, Trump's, Joe Biden, ” Shroyer, Jones, Jones hasn’t, Jan, antifa, Norm Pattis, Pattis, ” Pattis, Samuel Montoya, Montoya, Ashli Babbitt Organizations: WASHINGTON, U.S . Capitol, Prosecutors, Capitol, Republican, Democrat, Mr, Washington , D.C Locations: Austin , Texas, Washington, Infowars, United States, Washington ,
Former U.S. President and Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump speaks at a South Dakota Republican party rally in Rapid City, South Dakota, U.S. September 8, 2023. Trump, the front-runner for the 2024 Republican presidential nomination, said last month he planned to seek Chutkan's recusal as well as a change of venue for the case. Trump has frequently criticized Chutkan on his social media site since she was randomly assigned to preside over the election case in Washington federal court. The judge also previously warned Trump about attempting to influence potential witnesses in the case. "Presidents are not kings, and Plaintiff is not president," Chutkan wrote in that ruling.
Persons: Donald Trump, Jonathan Ernst, Tanya Chutkan, Trump, Chutkan, ” Trump, Jack Smith, Democrat Joe Biden, Barack Obama, Andrew Goudsward, Kanishka Singh, Jack Queen, Rami Ayyub, Scott Malone Organizations: U.S, Republican, South, South Dakota Republican, REUTERS, Rights, Former U.S, Trump, Capitol, Democrat, White, U.S . House, Thomson Locations: South Dakota, Rapid City , South Dakota, U.S, Former, Washington, Georgia
House Republicans have begun to make January 6 security camera footage publicly available. I watched as lawmakers fled for safety — and banded together — while rioters besieged the Capitol. AdvertisementAdvertisementRoger Stone in front of the O’Neill House Office Building, where the January 6 security camera footage can be viewed, in December 2021. Upstairs, I focused on a lone security camera in front of the House chamber. On another security camera in Longworth House Office Building, I watched lawmakers of both parties gathering near the secure location where they sheltered for the duration of the riot.
Persons: Kevin McCarthy, Tucker Carlson, Roger Stone, Anna Moneymaker, I'd, , Cori Bush, Bush, Steny Hoyer —, Madison Cawthorn, Eric Swalwell, Mike Pence —, Pence, Republican Sen, John Boozman, Democratic Sen, Dianne Feinstein, Lisa Murkowski, Dan Sullivan, Kevin Cramer, Sen, Jim Inhofe, Sheldon Whitehouse, Ashli Babbitt, there's, Barry Loudermilk Organizations: Republicans, Capitol, Service, House Republicans, Fox News, Administration, O'Neill, US Capitol Police, United States Capitol Police, Cannon House, Democratic, Rayburn House, Lawmakers, Republican, Democrat, Capitol Police, Republican Rep Locations: Wall, Silicon, O’Neill, Hart, Hart , Alaska Sens
Joe Biggs was convicted by a Washington, DC jury of several charges including seditious conspiracy for attempting to forcibly prevent the peaceful transfer of power from then-President Donald Trump to Joe Biden after the 2020 election. “People around the world would give anything for these rights.”But January 6, 2021, Kelly said, “broke our tradition of the peaceful transferring of power” in the United States. The hefty sentence is the second longest sentence handed down for a defendant convicted as part of the Capitol attack. Oath Keeper leader and founder Stewart Rhodes has received the longest sentence of 18 years in prison. Four of the defendants, Biggs, Tarrio, Nordean and Rehl, were convicted of seditious conspiracy, while Pezzola was acquitted of that charge.
Persons: Joe Biggs, Donald Trump, Joe Biden, Timothy Kelly, Kelly, , , Prosecutors, Biggs, , Stewart Rhodes, Ethan Nordean, Zachary Rehl, Enrique Tarrio –, Nordean, Rehl, Dominic Pezzola –, Tarrio, Pezzola, ” Biggs, Jason McCullough, ” McCullough Organizations: CNN, Capitol, The Locations: Washington, , United States
Washington CNN —Election officials in key battleground states are studying the legal viability of efforts to disqualify Donald Trump from running for president, based on the 14th Amendment’s ban on insurrectionists holding public office. A convicted January 6 rioter who was also a New Mexico county commissioner was removed from office based on 14th Amendment grounds, through a different but related legal mechanism. Their highly publicized attempts to remove GOP Reps. Marjorie Taylor Greene and Madison Cawthorn from the ballot were unsuccessful. It seems unlikely that any secretary of state would take such aggressive action like this on their own, and even if they did, it would be immediately challenged in court. He has been indicted on federal and state charges in connection with his wide-ranging attempts to subvert the 2020 election, including his role fueling the violence at the US Capitol.
Persons: Donald Trump, David Scanlan, Scanlan, Jocelyn Benson, rioter, Marjorie Taylor Greene, Madison Cawthorn, Trump, , Benson Organizations: Washington CNN —, New, Republican, MSNBC, Trump, GOP, Capitol Locations: New Hampshire, Michigan, New Mexico, Florida , Ohio , Wisconsin , New Hampshire, Georgia , Pennsylvania, Nevada, North Carolina
The pushback came in a defamation suit that Epps filed against the right-wing network. He claims Fox figures, including ex-host Tucker Carlson, destroyed his reputation by repeatedly raising the baseless idea that he led a false-flag plot to hurt Donald Trump. “Tucker Carlson (and/or his guests) described the known (and undisputed) facts” about Epps, Fox said in the filing. But this ignores the fact that a previous defamation lawsuit brought by Dominion Voting Systems demonstrated that several Fox hosts operated in bad faith, raising claims on-air that they didn’t actually believe. Fox News paid $787 million to settle with Dominion earlier this year and is still facing a $2.7 billion lawsuit from Smartmatic, another voting technology company.
Persons: CNN —, , Ray Epps, Epps, Tucker Carlson, Donald Trump, “ Tucker Carlson, Fox, Organizations: CNN, CNN — Fox News, Fox, Trump, Dominion Voting Systems, Fox News, Dominion Locations: Epps, Delaware, Smartmatic
At least three court cases touching legal issues that could affect special counsel Jack Smith’s approach are ripe for rulings from the DC Circuit. But the start of the new DC Circuit term in early September puts additional pressure on the circuit judges to clear out their opinions in lingering cases. Can investigators access data on the phone of a congressman who aided in Trump’s election reversal attempts? The DC Circuit has yet to decide whether investigators can access certain data from a phone of Perry’s that the FBI seized a year ago. However, Smith’s case as a criminal prosecution differs to the approach taken by the civil litigants in other ways.
Persons: Donald Trump, Jack Smith’s, Tanya Chutkan, Trump, Scott Perry, There’s, Smith, rioter Thomas Robertson, “ dishonestly, Karen Henderson, Nina Pillard, Florence Pan, Barack Obama, Joe Biden, Perry, Jeffrey Clark, Gregory Katsas, Neomi Rao, Ronald Reagan, Henderson, , Sri Srinivasan, Katsas, Judith Rogers, Obama, Bill Clinton Organizations: CNN, US, DC Circuit, Republican, Capitol, Trump, Department, FBI, Pennsylvania Republican, Democratic, Justice Department Locations: Washington ,, Pennsylvania
Washington CNN —Prominent conservative legal scholars are increasingly raising a constitutional argument that 2024 Republican candidate Donald Trump should be barred from the presidency because of his actions to overturn the previous presidential election result. Not all in the legal community agree – and what the scholars are proposing would need to be tested in court. He is no longer eligible to the office of Presidency,” the law review article said. Luttig and Tribe acknowledge the question of Trump appearing on ballots in 2024 might ultimately have to be decided by the Supreme Court. However, one convicted Capitol rioter, Couy Griffin, was removed from an elected county office he held in New Mexico by a judge.
Persons: Donald Trump, Laurence Tribe, J, Michael Luttig, who’s, , scrutinizes Trump, Donald J, Trump, William Baude, Michael Stokes Paulsen, Paulsen, , Baude, wouldn’t, ” Baude, Luttig, Marjorie Taylor Green, Madison Cawthorn, Couy Griffin Organizations: Washington CNN, Republican, U.S . Capitol, Federalist Society, University of Pennsylvania, Capitol, Trump, Presidency, Supreme, Madison Locations: Georgia, Fort Sumter, New Mexico
Trump is scheduled to appear before a magistrate judge on four criminal charges related to his efforts to overturn the 2020 presidential election. More than 1,000 Trump supporters who participated in the Capitol breach have also gone through the motions of a first appearance hearing that the former president will go through himself. Bill HennessyMetropolitan and US Capitol police officers are regularly seen in the building, often to appear as witnesses. But Chutkan’s sentences for January 6 rioters stand out as notably tough among the district court’s, according to data provided by the Justice Department. The defendant in that case, she remarked, “did not go to the United States Capitol out of any love for our country.
Persons: Donald Trump, Trump, Jack Smith, Barrett, Beryl Howell, ” Howell, , , CNN Trump, ” Trump, Guy Reffitt, Nancy Pelosi, Trump's, Bill Hennessy, Christopher Owens, Reggie Walton, Dustin Thompson, ” Thompson, Royce Lamberth, Alan Hostetter, Hostetter, Tanya Chutkan, didn’t, ” Chutkan Organizations: CNN, Capitol, Trump, Prosecutors, Boys, , Bill Hennessy Metropolitan, US Capitol, ” Metropolitan Police, Justice Department, United States Capitol Locations: Washington, DC, York, Manhattan, Florida, United States
In November 2021, Chutkan forcefully rejected Trump’s attempts to block the House select committee investigating January 6 from accessing more than 700 pages of records from his White House. “Presidents are not kings, and Plaintiff is not President,” Chutkan wrote in her ruling. At a December 2021 sentencing hearing, she looked ahead to the 2024 election, saying that “every day we are hearing about reports of anti-democratic factions, people plotting potential violence in 2024." … He went for one man.”At a sentencing hearing on October 4, 2021, she acknowledged the nationwide attention on the Capitol riot cases. At that same hearing, she also rejected comparisons between January 6 and the 2020 protests against racial inequality.
Persons: Tanya Chutkan, who's, Donald Trump’s, Chutkan, Trump’s, ” Chutkan, , Trump, sentencings, , Read Organizations: United States Capitol, Capitol Locations: Washington ,
US District Judge Tanya Chutkan has been assigned to the 2020 election fraud case against Trump. Chutkan has gained a reputation for tough sentences against Jan. 6 Capitol rioters. She previously rejected Trump's request to block Jan. 6 records being released to a House committee. Then, in a now iconic line, Chutkan said: "Presidents are not kings, and Plaintiff is not President." Amanda Andrade-Rhoades/For The Washington Post via Getty ImagesChutkan also has a consistent record of throwing the book at convicted January 6, 2021, rioters, often more than other judges serving in DC's federal trial court.
Persons: Tanya Chutkan, Chutkan, Jan, Donald Trump's, she's, Barack Obama, Joe Biden, Amanda Andrade, Rhoades, didn't Organizations: Trump, Capitol, Service, National Archives, Washington, Getty, Justice Department, Politico Locations: Wall, Silicon, Washington , DC
The United States District Court judge assigned to oversee the case is Tanya Chutkan. She's the only DC judge who has sentenced J6 rioters to longer sentences than prosecutors requested. So, who is Judge Chutkan? Chutkan went to George Washington University in Washington, DC, for her bachelor's degree. The office of Judge Chutkan did not immediately respond to Insider's request for comment.
Persons: Donald Trump, Tanya Chutkan, Chutkan, Boies, Schiller, Flexner, Obama, Matthew Mazzocco, Trump, Biden, Anna Cominsky, Cominsky, Judge Chutkan Organizations: United States, Service, George Washington University, University of Pennsylvania Law School, District of Columbia Public Defender Service, Flexner LLP, Court, District of Columbia, District of, NBC News, Capitol, ABC News, weaponized Department of Justice, Criminal Defense, New York Law School, Trump, Washington Post Locations: Wall, Silicon, Washington ,, Kingston , Jamaica, District, District of Columbia, trier
CNN —Special counsel Jack Smith unveiled his case alleging that former President Donald Trump broke several laws in his attempts to overturn the 2020 election, with a grand jury indictment returned Tuesday that illustrated the depth and breadth of the federal criminal investigation. Trump, who has derided Smith’s case as a politically motivated “fake indictment,” has been summoned to appear before a magistrate judge on Thursday. Prosecutors put forward several examples of Trump being told by his aides that fraud claims he was promoting were false. The new indictment recounts a conversation between Trump and Meadows, during which Meadows allegedly told Trump that he had observed Georgia election officials were “conducting themselves in an exemplary fashion,” while assuring Trump they would find fraud if it existed. Hours later, Trump tweeted that the election officials were “terrible people” who were trying to cover-up evidence of fraud.
Persons: Jack Smith, Donald Trump, Prosecutors, Trump “, Trump, , it’s, ” Trump, Wisconsin –, , Mike Pence, Department of Homeland Security’s, , Kenneth Chesebro, Rudy Guiliani –, memorializing, they’re, Pence, Pat Cipollone, Trump’s, Giuliani, ” Pence, Pat Philbin, Philbin, Mark Meadows, Meadows, Tanya Chutkan –, Obama, Smith, he’ll Organizations: CNN, Trump, , White, Justice, Republican, Justice Department, Department of Homeland, Infrastructure Security Agency, Prosecutors, AZ, Capitol, CNN Prosecutors, , Manhattan Locations: United States, Wisconsin, Pennsylvania, Michigan, Detroit, Arizona, Cipollone, Trump, Meadows, Georgia, DC, Alabama
A convicted Jan. 6 rioter says he threw up on the Capitol building because he drank too much peach schnapps. Zachariah Sattler, 36, also allegedly smoked weed in the US Capitol building and bragged about it. Sattler wrote in a letter to a judge that he was out of shape and had inhaled tear gas when he vomited at the riot. Those actions, prosecutors allege and Sattler admits to, include throwing up outside the Capitol and smoking weed inside the building. After Jan. 6, Prosecutors say Sattler "bragged about his presence at the Capitol to others, specifically noting that he smoked marijuana while inside the Capitol."
Persons: Jan, rioter, Zachariah Sattler, Sattler, Prosecutors, that's Organizations: Capitol, Service, Prosecutors Locations: Wall, Silicon, Maryland
A truck driver who assaulted a police officer with a flagpole at the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, was sentenced on Monday to 52 months in federal prison. The attack by the driver, Peter Stager, produced one of the most disturbing images to emerge from the Capitol attack. Mr. Stager, 44, of Conway, Ark., was captured on video beating the officer, Blake Miller, with the flagpole in a fit of rage as Officer Miller lay facedown in a mob of other rioters with “no means of defending himself,” prosecutors wrote in court papers. Officers who fell victim to attacks in a tunnel on the terrace and on the steps there have repeatedly likened the violence to the hand-to-hand combat of a medieval battle. After assaulting Officer Miller, prosecutors say, Mr. Stager was caught on video pointing at the Capitol, and declaring: “Everybody in there is a disgrace.
Persons: Peter Stager, Stager, Blake Miller, Miller, , Carter Moore, Andrew Wayte Organizations: Capitol, Officers Locations: Conway, West Terrace
The FBI identified Kyle Fitzsimons in building surveillance from the 2021 riot at the Capitol. Photo: U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia
Persons: Kyle Fitzsimons Organizations: FBI, Capitol, District of Columbia
A Trump-appointed judge sentenced a Jan. 6 rioter to two years probation and 60 days of house arrest. Taylor Bensch pleaded guilty to disorderly conduct and theft of government property as part of a plea deal. According to NBC, Bensch told the FBI that "B-Squad" members trained in hand-to-hand combat and learned to handle firearms. Bensch was tearful in court on Friday and did not speak, deferring to his attorney Peter Cooper, according to NBC. "I know what I did was horrendous," Bensch told investigators, according to court records.
Persons: Trump, Taylor Bensch, Bensch, Trevor McFadden, Tyler Bensch, Donald Trump, McFadden, Peter Cooper, Cooper Organizations: Service, US, NBC, Police, Department of Justice, Southern Poverty Law, FBI, Capitol, Justice Department Locations: Wall, Silicon
A man was spotted running towards Obama's house, law enforcement officials told CBS News. The man, Taylor Taranto, has an open warrant on charges stemming from the January 6, 2021 riot. Taranto was also sued by the widow of a Metropolitan Police Department officer who died by suicide. Officials alleged that the man, Taylor Taranto, 37, also had multiple weapons and materials to make an explosive device similar to a Molotov cocktail, CBS News reported. A Metropolitan Police Department (MPD) spokesperson told Insider that officers and federal law enforcement partners arrested Taranto.
Persons: Taylor Taranto, , Barack Obama's, Taranto, sleuths, HuffPost, Erin Smith, Jeff Smith, Smith Organizations: CBS News, Metropolitan Police Department, Service, Capitol, Officials, Secret Service, Ordnance, ABC News, MPD Locations: Obama's, Taranto, Washington
CNN —A man with numerous firearms and materials to make an explosive was arrested Thursday in former President Barack Obama’s Washington, DC, neighborhood after claiming on an internet livestream that he had a detonator, law enforcement officials told CNN. Taylor Taranto, who had an open warrant for his arrest related to the January 6, 2021, US Capitol attack, was arrested by the Metropolitan Police Department and federal law enforcement. “There is no active threat to the community and this incident remains under investigation.”According to law enforcement officials, firearms and materials to make Molotov cocktails were found in Taranto’s car. There is currently no indication of a direct threat to the Obamas, law enforcement officials told CNN. In court filings related to the ongoing suit, Taranto admitted to being inside the Capitol during the attack, but denied any wrongdoing.
Persons: Barack Obama’s, Taylor Taranto, United States Capitol Police “, , Jason Bell, Jeffrey Smith, Taranto, Smith Organizations: CNN, Metropolitan Police Department, Team, United States Capitol Police, Terrorism Task Forces, MPD, Capitol, Capitol police Locations: Barack Obama’s Washington, DC, Taranto, ” Taranto
Kellye SoRelle was charged with conspiracy related to the Capitol riots on January 6, 2021. Experts found SoRelle incompetent to stand trial, recommending three to four months of treatment. Prosecutors charged SoRelle with conspiracy in September 2022 related to the Capitol riots on January 6, 2021. Photos from the riots show SoRelle in attendance alongside Stewart Rhodes, founder and leader of the Oath Keepers. According to the Associated Press, SoRelle — who was acting as the general counsel for the Oath Keepers — was also present at a meeting with Rhodes the night before the Capitol riots.
Persons: Kellye SoRelle, , Amit Mehta, She's, Stewart Rhodes, Rhodes, SoRelle — Organizations: Service, Associated Press, Prosecutors, Capitol, Politico Locations: Texas
But the judge who sentenced Maly noted that most of his crimes date back to his 20s. Maly told US District Judge Amit Mehta that he regrets traveling to Washington and following the mob of then-President Donald Trump's supporters to the Capitol. It's that you did these things and kept doing them that day," the judge told him. Maly testified at his trial that participating in the Capitol riot was "fun" for him. The judge sentenced Schwartz last month to 14 years and two months in prison, the longest for a Jan. 6 case before Rhodes, and sentenced Brown in April to four years and six months in prison.
Persons: Markus Maly, Maly, , Markus Maly's, Amit Mehta, Donald Trump's, they're, Stephen Rancourt, Stewart Rhodes, Joe Biden, Christopher Boyle, Rancourt, Peter Schwartz, Jeffrey Scott Brown, Schwartz, Brown, Rhodes, Benjamin Schiffelbein, Schiffelbein Organizations: Service, Justice, Maly, Prosecutors, Capitol, Trump, Republican, Democrat, Metropolitan Police, Associated Locations: Washington, Fincastle , Virginia, West Terrace
Show with Bob and David' actor has been charged with a felony over his alleged actions at the January 6 Capitol siege. The actor was arrested in California, according to Ryan J. Reilly of NBC News. In December, Johnston was removed from the cast of "Bob's Burgers," and a number of his former colleagues — including actor and comedy writer Tim Heidecker — suggested on Twitter that Johnston was the man in the photo. Three current or former associates of Johnston identified him in the photographs circulated by the FBI, according to the federal complaint. Johnston has been charged with felony obstruction of officers during civil disorder, unlawful entry on restricted buildings or grounds, and impeding passage through Capitol grounds.
Persons: Bob, David, Ryan J, Reilly, , Jay Johnston, Johnston —, Johnston, Tim Heidecker — Organizations: FBI, NBC News, Service, NBC News ., Independent Nations, Twitter, Lower Locations: California, Lower West
A Capitol rioter who had a free lawyer raised $17,000 to cover his legal fees, prosecutors allege. Prosecutors allege that some defendants are seeking to personally profit from their charges. Prosecutors allege in a sentencing memorandum that John Strand raised "more than $17,300 for his 'legal defense' without disclosing that he in fact has taxpayer-funded counsel." An Associated Press review of court records found that prosecutors have asked judges to impose hefty fines on several defendants who raised money online. Though a fundraising page for Maly said that the funds would go to "his family," prosecutors allege that because he has a public defender, he is seeking to profit from his crime.
A supporter of US President Donald Trump sits inside the office of US Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi as he protest inside the US Capitol in Washington, DC, January 6, 2021. The Arkansas man who was photographed on Jan. 6, 2021, with his feet on a desk in then-Speaker Nancy Pelosi's office was sentenced Wednesday to four and a half years in prison. Richard 'Bigo' Barnett arrives at the E. Barrett Prettyman United States Courthouse for jury selection in his trial on January 10, 2023 in Washington, DC. Before he left Pelosi's office, Barnett took an envelope that he later displayed for cameras outside the Capitol. After his arrest, "Barnett sought to profit from his notoriety and criminal conduct," including by selling autographed pictures of himself in Pelosi's office, prosecutors said.
Persons: Donald Trump, Nancy Pelosi, Mr, Barnett, Richard, Bigo, Nancy Pelosi's, Richard ' Bigo, Barrett Prettyman, Pelosi, Nancy, he'd, Elect Biden, he's, Ryan J, Reilly, Daniel Barnes Organizations: DC, U.S . Capitol, Capitol, Prosecutors, Washington , D.C Locations: Washington , DC, Arkansas, Washington ,, United States, New York, Washington
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