Capitol rioters hit with severe sentences and
sharp reprimands from judges
Some of the longest sentences have gone to rioters
charged with ‘assaulting a police officer with a dangerous weapon’
A federal judge sentenced Jacob Chansley, nicknamed
the ‘QAnon shaman’, to 41 months in prison.
Maya Yang
Thu 23 Dec
2021 10.00 GMT
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/dec/23/capitol-rioters-severe-sentences-reprimands-judges
Judges
across the US have been handing down stiff sentences and hard words in recent
weeks for extremist supporters of Donald Trump who took part in the 6 January
insurrection at the US Capitol.
Since a
federal judge sentenced Jacob Chansley, the US Capitol rioter nicknamed the
“QAnon shaman” for his horned headdress, to 41 months in prison last month,
more US judges have been delivering strict sentences to defendants charged over
their roles in the attacks earlier this year.
Since the
riots, federal prosecutors have brought cases against 727 individuals over
their involvement in the deadly riots. With hundreds facing criminal charges,
Trump has come under growing scrutiny from the House select committee
investigating the attacks.
The longest
sentence so far was handed down to a Florida man who threw a wooden plank and
fire extinguisher at police officers during the riots. On 17 December, Judge
Tanya Chutkan sentenced Robert Palmer to 63 months of jail time, describing the
prison term as “the consequence of those actions”.
According
to Chutkan, individuals who attempted to “violently overthrow the government”
and “stop the peaceful transition of power” would be met with “absolutely
certain punishment”.
At his
hearing, Palmer said he was “really, really ashamed” of his behavior, adding
that he was “absolutely devastated” to see the “coldness and calculation” that
he used to attack Capitol police.
On Tuesday,
a Washington state man was sentenced to 46 months of prison time for assaulting
police officers with a speaker and a metal baton during the riots. According to
court documents, Devlyn Thompson helped move police shields up against a line
of rioters in a tunnel, as well as hit police officers.
US District
Judge Royce Lamberth told Thompson, “The violence that happened that day was
such a blatant disregard to the institutions of government … You’re shoving and
pushing … and participating in this riot for hours.”
Thompson is
the second rioter, after Palmer, to be sentenced for the felony of assaulting a
police officer with a dangerous weapon. More than 140 other rioters face the
same charge.
Lamberth
also sentenced an 81-year-old Army veteran on the same day to three years of
probation for illegally breaching the Capitol.
Gary
Wickersham, one of the oldest of more than 700 rioters facing charges, was
sentenced to 90 days of home detention, and will also have to pay a $2,000 fine
and $500 for building damage.
Defense
lawyers argued against any confinement, saying that Wickersham would be unable
to visit his grandchildren during his “golden years”.
During his
hearing, Wickersham asked for “mercy” from Lamberth and explained that he went
to the Capitol because “you get bored” sitting at home.
“Mr
Wickersham, I appreciate what you’ve done here. I think you have led the way
for others to recognize that the jig is up,” said Lamberth. The 78-year-old
judge also told Wickersham that he is “the first defendant I’ve had that’s
older than me in quite some time”.
On Tuesday,
a Pennsylvania man was also sentenced over his involvement in the riots after
his wife accidentally implicated him in a Facebook status. US District Judge
James Boasberg sentenced Gary Edwards to one year of probation, 200 hours of
community service, as well as a $2,500 fine and $500 in damage fees.
In a since
deleted Facebook post, Edward’s wife wrote, “Okay ladies, let me tell you what
happened as my husband was there inside the Capitol,” adding, “these were
people who watched their rights being taken away, their votes stolen from them,
their state officials violating the constitution of their country.”
According
to authorities, Edwards took pictures, helped teargassed protesters and entered
an office of an unidentified congressional official.
“There
really is no more serious and profound action democracy takes than the
certifying of a lawful and fair election,” Boasberg said. “And to the extent
anyone would interfere with that, particularly with force of violence, they
strike at the root of democracy,” he added.
That
message would seem to go for organizers of the 6 January events as well as
participants in the violence.
On 22
November, US District Judge Royce Lamberth sentenced Capitol rioter Frank Scavo
to 60 days in prison, one of the strictest sentences handed down to a
misdemeanor defendant and more than four times the prosecutor’s recommendation
of two weeks.
Scavo, a
Trump supporter from Pennsylvania and former school board official, was found
guilty of chartering buses to transport approximately 200 residents from
Pennsylvania to the Capitol on 6 January.
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