Trump
issues 1,500 ‘unconditional’ pardons over January 6 Capitol attack
President
makes good on campaign promise and issues pardons and commutations over deadly
2021 insurrection
Donald Trump
returns to office – live updates
Martin
Pengelly and Rachel Leingang
Tue 21 Jan
2025 01.43 GMT
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/jan/20/trump-executive-orders-jan-6-pardons
Donald Trump
on Monday issued “full, complete and unconditional” presidential pardons for
about 1,500 people who were involved in the January 6 attack on Congress,
including some convicted of violent acts, making good on his promise to act in
such cases on day one of his second term.
In addition
to the pardons, he issued commutations for more than a dozen cases, shortening
sentences for those that he said needed “further research”. Among those whose
sentences were commuted was Stewart Rhodes, the founder of the far-right Oath
Keepers militia.
“This is a
big one. We hope they come out tonight, frankly,” Trump said while signing the
pardons in the Oval Office on Monday night after he referred to those convicted
as “hostages”.
Trump also
directed the justice department to dismiss all pending indictments against
people related to January 6.
“This
proclamation ends a grave national injustice that has been perpetrated upon the
American people over the last four years and begins a process of national
reconciliation,” Trump’s action says.
Some in the
president’s circle wanted him to review the cases one by one, assessing who was
deserving of a pardon. But Trump decided all deserved some form of clemency for
the event he has rewritten as a “day of love”.
The J6
community, as the group calls itself, had pushed for blanket pardons because
they believe the prosecutions had been tainted entirely. Some believe the
government played a role in orchestrating the insurrection, absolving them of
any responsibility for their actions.
A procession
of Proud Boys marched in Washington on Monday, carrying a banner that
congratulated Trump on his victory, a visible representation of the welcome the
far right is receiving from the new administration. They chanted “fuck Joe
Biden” and “fuck antifa” in their return to the national stage, and called for
Trump to “free our boys”.
Some of
their members have been charged for their involvement in the insurrection,
including for charges of seditious conspiracy. The group’s former national
chairperson, Enrique Tarrio, was sentenced to 22 years in prison for his role,
and he has been publicly pleading for Trump to pardon him and other “J6ers”.
Rightwing journalists and Tarrio’s family have said he was being released after
Trump’s action.
At the time
of Tarrio’s sentencing, federal prosecutors said: “No organization put more
boots on the ground at the Capitol on January 6, 2021 than the Proud Boys, and
they were at the forefront of every major breach of the Capitol’s defenses,
leading the on-the-ground efforts to storm the seat of government.”
Democracy
advocacy groups called the pardons an affront to the rule of law that would
enable people to commit similar crimes in the future.
“It is
perhaps on brand that Donald Trump has kicked off his 2nd term with an assault
on our democracy, just as he ended his first term,” said Lisa Gilbert, the
co-president of watchdog group Public Citizen. “This isn’t just about degrading
the US constitution and the rule of law in theory, his disgraceful actions here
send a message that political violence is acceptable, so long as it is in
support of him and his pursuit of unchecked power.”
Police who
defended the Capitol that day also said the move puts people at risk.
“Today is
another dark day in American history and a continuation of the stain that
January 6th left on our nation. I am infuriated, but not surprised in the
slightest. We can’t pretend to be shocked because Trump has fulfilled his
longstanding promise to pardon the criminals he incited to attack me and my
fellow officers,” former Capitol police officer Harry Dunn said.
In the lead
up to Trump signing the pardons, Jake Lang – accused of beating police officers
outside the Capitol during the insurrection – noted on X that the justice
department had dropped his case. He had sought repeated delays of his case,
spending more than four years in jail awaiting trial.
“IM FINALLY
COMING HOME!!!! GOD BE MAGNIFIED!!!” Lang wrote. “MOUNTAINS DO REALLY MOVE IN
JESUS NAME!!!”
An ongoing
vigil outside the DC jail, where some “J6ers” were being held, grew larger than
its typical size as supporters showed up to hear when their loved ones would be
released and celebrated Trump’s pardons, a livestream outside the jail showed.
Perhaps the
most visible face of the rioters, Jacob Chansley, known as the “Qanon shaman”,
wrote on Twitter/X that he had just gotten the news from his lawyer that he was
pardoned. Chansley, who stormed the Capitol in horns and a fur pelt, was
released early from prison in 2023.
“I JUST GOT
THE NEWS FROM MY LAWYER... I GOT A PARDON BABY! THANK YOU PRESIDENT TRUMP!!!
NOW I AM GONNA BUY SOME MOTHA FU*KIN GUNS!!! I LOVE THIS COUNTRY!!! GOD BLESS
AMERICA!!!! J6ers are getting released & JUSTICE HAS COME... EVERYTHING
done in the dark WILL come to light!” he wrote on X.
On 6 January
2021, in a speech at the Ellipse, outside the White House, Trump told
supporters to “fight like hell” to stop certification of his conclusive 2020
defeat by Joe Biden, based on Trump’s lies about electoral fraud. Trump also
told supporters he would march to the US Capitol with them, a promise he did
not fulfill.
Hundreds of
police officers were injured in the attack, which is now linked to nine deaths,
law enforcement suicides among them.
The riot
failed to stop the election certification and Biden took office. Impeached for
inciting an insurrection, Trump was left free to run for office when only seven
Republican senators voted to convict.
A Department
of Justice investigation of Trump’s election subversion around the January 6
attack produced four criminal charges but was dropped after Trump defeated
Kamala Harris in last year’s presidential election. A report by the special
counsel, Jack Smith, was released last week. It said Trump would have been
convicted at trial.
On the
campaign trail, Trump made January 6 pardons a central part of his message, his
rallies often featuring the national anthem sung by prisoners in a Washington
DC jail.
With Trump
back in office, justice department investigations of crimes linked to January 6
are expected to cease.
On 6 January
this year, the department said 1,583 defendants had been federally charged with
crimes associated with the attack.
Of those
defendants, 608 were charged with violent crimes, whether “assaulting,
resisting, or impeding law enforcement agents or officers or obstructing those
officers during a civil disorder”, and “including approximately 174 defendants
charged with using a deadly or dangerous weapon or causing serious bodily
injury to an officer”.
Listing
weapons used or carried during the attack, the department described “firearms;
OC spray; tasers; edged weapons, including a sword, axes, hatchets, and knives;
and makeshift weapons, such as destroyed office furniture, fencing, bike racks,
stolen riot shields, baseball bats, hockey sticks, flagpoles, PVC piping, and
reinforced knuckle gloves”.
Eighteen
people were charged with seditious conspiracy, the most serious charge laid.
The heaviest sentences ranged from 10 to 22 years.
More than
1,000 defendants pleaded guilty to January 6 offenses. In all, the justice
department said, “approximately 1,100 defendants have had their cases fully
adjudicated and received sentences for their criminal activity on January 6,
including 667 sentenced to periods of incarceration and an additional 145 …
allowed to serve the entirety of their sentence” at home.
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