Proud Boys leader denied early release from
Washington DC jail
Poor living conditions not a sufficient reason for
Henry ‘Enrique’ Tarrio to get house arrest or reduced sentence, judge rules
Maya Yang
Tue 23 Nov
2021 19.03 GMT
The leader
of the Proud Boys far-right group has been denied early release from jail in
Washington DC.
In a ruling
released on Friday, superior court judge Jonathan H Pittman said poor living
conditions were not sufficient reason for Henry “Enrique” Tarrio to be
transferred to house arrest or to have his sentence reduced.
The
“appropriate remedy for unconstitutional conditions of confinement is
correction of the unconstitutional conditions of confinement, which are
experienced by all inmates, not just the defendant”, Pittman wrote.
Tarrio is
serving a five-month sentence for stealing and burning a Black Lives Matter
banner from a historic Black church in the capital, after Donald Trump’s
election defeat.
Tarrio also
requested to be freed under DC’s “compassionate release” statute, which Pittman
also denied.
Tarrio, he
said, “fails to establish that his case presents ‘extraordinary and compelling
reasons’ warranting a modification”.
Tarrio
claimed to have been harassed by correctional officers and said his cell
regularly floods with water from a toilet in a neighboring cell.
“I’ve been
to jail before and what I’ve seen here, I’ve never seen anywhere else,” Tarrio
said in a video testimony.
Tarrio also
described abusive guards, smoke-filled hallways and medical neglect, saying he
witnessed a prisoner have a seizure and wait for half an hour before help
arrived.
Approximately
three dozen Proud Boys members and associates have been charged in connection
with the 6 January Capitol riot, in which Trump supporters sought to overturn
his election defeat.
Some have
been charged with conspiring to carry out a coordinated attack to stop Congress
certifying Joe Biden’s victory.
Tarrio was
not at the Capitol on 6 January and has not been charged in connection to the
riot. He was arrested on 4 January, on his way to DC. Police pulled him over on
a warrant for vandalizing the Black Lives Matter sign, which was stolen from
the Asbury United Methodist church the previous month.
Officers
also found Tarrio to be carrying two unloaded ammunition magazines emblazoned with
the Proud Boys logo, which he said he sells.
Tarrio
pleaded guilty in August to destruction of property and attempted possession of
a large-capacity ammunition feeding device.
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