Trump pardons nearly all Jan. 6 rioters
ASPartOfMe
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“These are the hostages,” Trump said from the Oval Office, referring to the convicted and charged defendants. “Approximately 1,500 for a pardon – full pardon.”
By pardoning the defendants, Trump has granted full clemency to hundreds of people already convicted of felony crimes like assaulting police and destroying property as part of the effort to disrupt the peaceful transfer of power.
More than 730 people have been convicted of misdemeanor offenses in connection with January 6, according to the latest Justice Department estimates. Further, there are about 300 prosecutions still pending in court as of Monday, including many accused of violent felony crimes, such as assaulting police.
More than 140 police officers were injured during the seven-hour siege, which also led directly and indirectly to the deaths of four Trump supporters in the mob and five police officers.
After the attack, the Justice Department and FBI launched a nationwide manhunt to identify and arrest rioters, which turned into the biggest criminal probe in US history. Prosecutors charged more than 1,580 people and secured roughly 1,270 convictions.
About 55% of January 6 prosecutions are misdemeanor cases, with charges like disorderly conduct or trespassing, according to Justice Department data. For those convicted, the vast majority were sentenced to probation or a few months in prison and were already released.
Some defendants are elderly people who got caught up in the frenzy. Others went inside the Capitol for a handful of minutes but never attacked anyone or vandalized anything. Most have no criminal record. A large chunk of the people in the mob said they never intended to infiltrate the Capitol, let alone disrupt Congress’ certification of the 2020 election results. Some believe they were waved into the building by police.
Pardons vs. commutations
Pardons don’t erase a defendant’s criminal record and don’t overturn a conviction, though the pardon will be added to their record.
But a pardon forgives the offense and restores the recipient’s civil rights, like gun ownership or voting rights. For convicted rioters on probation, a pardon will end their probation early.
Presidents also have the power to commute sentences of people convicted of federal crimes. For instance, a president can reduce or eliminate someone’s prison sentence, which could pave the way for incarcerated January 6 rioters to be freed from custody.
Unlike a pardon, a commutation does not forgive the crime and does not restore the recipient’s civil rights. Similar to pardons, a commutation does not erase a conviction.
US attorney Matthew Graves, a Biden appointee who oversaw the prosecution of the rioters, last week condemned any possible pardons but said nothing will erase the events of 2021.
“A pardon does not wipe away what occurred,” Graves told CNN.
Americans oppose January 6 pardons
Most Americans oppose these pardons, according to recent polls on the topic that were conducted before Trump took office. Independents are also firmly against pardons for January 6 rioters – but they are very popular among Republicans, according to the data.
One poll found 59% of adults oppose pardoning people who “forced their way into the Capitol.” Two separate surveys found 66% and 62% opposition to pardoning anyone “convicted” in the attack on the Capitol. A poll from Quinnipiac University found 59% of registered voters oppose pardoning anyone who was “convicted and jailed” in connection with January 6.
But a large swath of Trump’s base supports clemency. The Quinnipiac that asked about pardons for already “convicted and jailed” found solid GOP support at 67%.
Since the Trump era began there has been a lot of talk that America has become a banana republic. That idea has been hyperbole. Today between Biden pardoning his family and Trump pardoning insurrectionists this country took a massive step in that direction. I say that even though I don’t have an issue with pardoning those 1/6 protesters who committed misdemeanors and that I understand why Biden’s pardons were arguably the lesser of two evils. Those caveats do not change that what happened today is typical of authoritarian countries.
With hostages’ families behind him, Trump says he’ll pardon ‘January 6 hostages
The Israeli families had just been called to the stage by Trump’s Mideast envoy Steve Witkoff at the post-inauguration rally in Washington. Trump shook hands with each of them who then stood behind him as he gave one of his typical political rally speeches.
After announcing his decision to pardon the “J6 hostages,” Trump turns to the Israeli group and reflects on the ceasefire deal Witkoff helped finalize last week.
“We never stopped praying for you, and we’re so glad that you’re reunited with your friends and families,” Trump says.
While introducing Trump, Witkoff says the Israeli hostage families will be meeting with the president later tonight.
The hostage families are in Washington to urge the new administration to ensure the nascent ceasefire deal is upheld through all three phases amid concerns that Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s government will resume fighting after the first phase, preventing the release of the remaining hostages.
To talk about January 6th “hostages” in front of the families of actual hostages is an obscenity. Actually there is no word in the English language to describe how bad this was. The poor families
are not in any position to do anything about it.
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cyberdora
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I'm hoping trump doesn't go after the capitol police who saved lives protecting senators. In particular the hero who shot Ashli Babbitt.
If I was Nancy Pelosi, AOC or even Mike Pence, I would get 24hr security with all these dangerous individuals being released back into the population.
cyberdora
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cyberdora
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Qanon shaman Jacob Chansley's response to being released
“I JUST GOT THE NEWS FROM MY LAWYER…I GOT A PARDON BABY! THANK YOU PRESIDENT TRUMP!! !” Chansley, who was photographed inside the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, with a horned helmet, painted face and bare chest, wrote on X. “NOW I AM GONNA BUY SOME MOTHA FU*KIN GUNS!! ! I LOVE THIS COUNTRY!! ! GOD BLESS AMERICA!! !!”
Gosh! I bet all those decent republicans who voted for trump must be so glad they released this guy
cyberdora
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Stewart Rhodes (Oath Keepers leader) said he had no regrets about his role in 1/6.
the US justice department actually wanted Rhodes sentenced to 25 years for organising the attack, he got 18.
He planned a military style invasion of the capitol building for the purpose of lynching democrats and moderate republicans who supported the passing of the election. Images of the trump family cheering the attack (including the Donald) was recorded on film.
Again, If I was Pence, AOC or Pelosi, I would engage security protection.
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IMO, Donald "Pumpkin" Trump isn't a real leader he's a dictator wannabe.
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ASPartOfMe
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Relief, revenge but little repentance: Trump's pardons delight Jan. 6 offenders
On Monday, just two days before her 56th birthday, Bisignano had another reason to celebrate, when Trump issued pardons that erased the case against her. A federal judge signed the dismissal on Tuesday. On Wednesday, Bisignano was a free woman.
“I have no regrets,” Bisignano said, adding that she wouldn’t change anything even if “you handed me a million dollars.”
It was a common thread among a dozen interviews NBC News conducted with Jan. 6 offenders who received pardons from Trump this week. They were uniformly grateful for Trump’s deliverance, but unlike in many of the sentencing hearings held at Washington’s federal courthouse in recent years, signs of remorse were in short supply, though a few others have expressed contrition. Many still hold onto the false, debunked notion — stoked by Trump as recently as Monday, while standing in the Capitol — that the 2020 election was stolen. And while some of those pardoned spoke words of conciliation, others hinted eagerly at a reckoning to come.
Bisignano told NBC News she believes that God placed her in the lower west tunnel of the Capitol, where some of the worst violence took place on Jan. 6, 2021, and where she picked up a megaphone and encouraged a mob of her fellow Trump supporters to join the battle.
She initially cooperated with law enforcement, testifying against a fellow Trump supporter she knew from California. But her testimony wasn’t very useful, with U.S. District Judge Amy Berman Jackson calling Bisignano “a hot mess” and “possibly one of the worst witnesses” she’d ever heard. Now, Bisignano said, she has “prevailed” and come out “much stronger” on the other side of the experience.
The hunters have become the hunted,” she said, predicting that the federal prosecutors who pursued her case would be fired and calling for Jackson to be removed as well. “She needs to be impeached,” Bisignano said. “She’s on the wrong side of history, Ms. Amy Jackson. I’d like to have a little conversation with her.”
Bisignano wasn’t the only one celebrating. Outside the D.C. jail, supporters quickly bought up MAGA hats from a vendor to hand out to prisoners upon their release. One of those gathered was Eric Ball, whose son Daniel was in jail facing charges of setting off an explosive device in the lower west Capitol tunnel during the riot. Eric Ball said the riot was a setup: “Anybody who denies it is either incredibly evil, or irredeemably stupid,” he said.
(Daniel Ball is one of only a handful of Jan. 6 rioters still in custody: He was rearrested on gun charges, related to past convictions for domestic violence by strangulation and battery against a law enforcement officer, following his release in Washington.)
Gregory Purdy, who was convicted of six felonies, including assaulting law enforcement officers, was among those still holding onto the false claims that the 2020 election was rigged.
“Even if we have a difference of opinion, I believe the people there were defending democracy,” Purdy said upon his release from the D.C. jail on Tuesday. “I believe that we had an election that had major computational issues.”
Caleb Fuller, the younger half of a father-son pair facing felony civil disorder charges of resisting police on Jan. 6, said after his case was dismissed that he still believes the 2020 election was stolen and that he saw no violence during the Capitol riot.
Ryan Wilson, who was found guilty of six felonies after prosecutors presented evidence of him using a pipe as a weapon against police in a Capitol tunnel, also called the charges he faced “phony” upon his release from the D.C. jail.
Rachel Powell was sentenced to five years in prison (and served just over a year) for actions on Jan. 6, 2021, that included using an ice axe to destroy a window at the Capitol. Asked what she would change if she could go back in time after receiving her pardon, Powell said, “You know what, when the police became violent and everything started getting out of control, I wish we would’ve all just sat down.”
Another pardon recipient, Gabriel Garcia, was reminded of a previous interview where he said "I regret going that day," distanced himself from the Proud Boys, and said that he wished he'd never gone to Washington on Jan. 6, 2021.
But as he was anticipating his pardon Monday, Garcia said he "never cut off" from the Proud Boys. And as for his previous words of regret: "No, I didn't mean it.
Others’ thoughts quickly turned more ominous.
William Sarsfield, who was convicted of committing violence in the Capitol, headed to Washington to await the release of friends after he got out of the federal detention center in Philadelphia.
He thanked Trump profusely for pardoning him and issued a vague threat when asked what he would do next: “To regroup, go home and find out the nefarious actors in local homes and towns, because we’ve got to take care of our own house. and it starts there,” Sarsfield said, wearing a camouflage hat emblazoned with the words “Biden sucks.”
Another prominent Jan. 6 offender, Jacob Chansley, posted on X that he was going to buy guns after receiving his pardon and having gun rights restored. “EVERYTHING done in the dark WILL come to light!” he continued.
But Purdy and some others did sound notes of reconciliation.
“We’re still brothers and sisters, we’ve still got to love each other. … You’ve got to make sure that you don’t have hate in your heart for anybody,” Purdy told NBC News. “So to my liberal brothers and sisters, I reach my arm across and say, let’s find common ground.”
Guy Reffitt, who was turned in by his son over his role on Jan. 6, said he loved his son in an interview shortly after he was released. His son, Jackson, told MSNBC earlier on Wednesday that he “can’t imagine being safe now” that his father had been released and that he had bought a gun for protection.
Mostly, the pardon recipients were effusive in their praise of Trump, whose false statements about the 2020 election being stolen helped set off the chain of events that led many of them to the Capitol when the Electoral College results were set to be certified.
“Thank you, cause he’s put my family back together again. Without him, I wouldn’t be out right now,” Powell said of Trump.
One inmate in the D.C. jail, speaking by phone to a small crowd gathered outside on Monday, said he and others had been watching as Trump mentioned pardoning Jan. 6 offenders in remarks shortly after his inaugural address.
“You’re going to see a lot of action on the J6 hostages,” Trump had said to an overflow crowd of supporters in the Capitol’s Emancipation Hall, after suggestng that advisers had asked him to leave that out of his inaugural address to make the speech more “unifying.”
Stewart Rhodes, the former leader of the Oath Keepers militia who was found guilty by a federal jury of charges that included seditious conspiracy, had his 18-year sentence commuted by Trump. Rhodes’ first stop after his release was outside the D.C. jail, where he commended the president for doing “the right thing” and said he and others had not received a “fair trial” in front of a “fair jury.” (Multiple Jan. 6 convictions have been upheld by a federal appeals court that considered and dismissed claims of jury bias.)
On Wednesday, reporters spotted Rhodes in one of the House of Representatives’ office buildings in the Capitol complex. He said he was there to advocate for the release of a fellow Oath Keeper, Jeremy Brown, who is still in prison because he was convicted of other federal charges unrelated to Jan. 6.
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cyberdora
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Among those pardoned by trump...
Guy Reffitt, who was turned in by his son over his role on Jan. 6, said he loved his son in an interview shortly after he was released. His son, Jackson, told MSNBC earlier on Wednesday that he “can’t imagine being safe now” that his father had been released and that he had bought a gun for protection.
I wonder if one of these criminals (and yes they are still criminals) actually assaults a member of the public (like Jackson's son) whether that person can sue trump?
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Guy Reffitt, who was turned in by his son over his role on Jan. 6, said he loved his son in an interview shortly after he was released. His son, Jackson, told MSNBC earlier on Wednesday that he “can’t imagine being safe now” that his father had been released and that he had bought a gun for protection.
I wonder if one of these criminals (and yes they are still criminals) actually assaults a member of the public (like Jackson's son) whether that person can sue trump?
Pretty sure the SCROTUS determined the president is immune to civil suits, even after leaving office.
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cyberdora
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