Trump
uses Hunter Biden pardon to hint potential clemency for January 6
insurrectionists
Trump says
Joe Biden’s pardon of his son is a ‘miscarriage of justice’ in latest
supportive reference to convicted rioters
Robert Tait
in Washington
Mon 2 Dec
2024 19.05 CET
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2024/dec/02/hunter-biden-pardon-trump-jan-6
Donald Trump
seized on Hunter Biden’s pardon to drop one of his strongest hints yet that he
intends to grant clemency to at least some of the instigators and participants
of the January 6 attack on the US Capitol by a mob trying to overturn his 2020
election defeat.
“Does the
Pardon given by Joe to Hunter include the J-6 Hostages, who have now been
imprisoned for years? Such an abuse and miscarriage of Justice!” the US
president-elect posted on his Truth Social platform.
It was the
latest in a series of supportive comments by Trump on behalf of those convicted
for their part in the onslaught, which resulted in the deaths of five people at
the time. Additionally, four police officers involved in trying to beat back
the rioters killed themselves in the days and months after the attack.
Now the
granting of a pardon by the sitting president, Joe Biden, to his son appears to
have been taken by Trump as a fresh justification.
The 2021
assault spawned one of the biggest criminal investigations in US history,
resulting in federal charges being filed against nearly 1,500 people. About
1,000 have either been found guilty or pleaded guilty.
The
investigation is ongoing. The FBI said last month it was seeking nine people in
connection with violent assaults on police officers on the day.
Despite the
seriousness of the offences, Trump has been publicly itching for months to act
on behalf of those imprisoned, whom he has labelled “hostages” and “political
prisoners”.
In March, he
wrote that one of his first acts in office, if re-elected, would be to “Free
the January 6 Hostages being wrongfully imprisoned!”
He has
repeated the vow several times, including in an appearance at the National
Association of Black Journalists in July, when asked if he would grant a
pardon.
“Oh,
absolutely, I would. If they’re innocent, I would pardon them,” he said.
But he has
stopped short of promising a blanket pardon. “I can’t say for every single one,
because a couple of them, probably they got out of control,” he told CNN.
Some of
those convicted and given the longest sentences did not take part in the
violence inside the Capitol but were convicted of seditious conspiracy and
other charges connected with organising the attack. They include Stewart
Rhodes, founder of the Oath Keepers, a far-right militia group, and Enrique
Tarrio, leader of the Proud Boys, which has been described as a neo-fascist
organisation that promotes political violence.
Whatever
distinctions Trump and his campaign team have in mind, there is little question
that hopes are high among many of those in custody that a pardon could be
forthcoming.
Lawyers for
Joe Biggs, a Proud Boys member given a 17-year prison sentence last year after
being convicted of a spate of crimes including seditious conspiracy and
intimidation or threats to prevent officers from discharging their duties, have
said they would be requesting a pardon.
Biggs
claimed at his trial that he was following Trump’s orders.
Lawyers for
several of those convicted have unsuccessfully sought to delay sentencing
hearings since Trump won last month’s presidential election, on the basis that
clemency might be at hand.
Among those
incarcerated, at least one has little doubt about the prospects of imminent
freedom.
Jake Lang,
who is charged with several offences, including charging police officers,
posted in celebratory fashion on social media after Trump’s election win, the
BBC reported.
“COMING
HOME!!!!,” he wrote. “THE JANUARY 6 POLITICAL PRISONERS ARE FINALLY COMING
HOME!!!!”
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