A comprehensive and constantly updated list of violent Trump supporters charged in Trump's Jan 6 insurrection

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A comprehensive and constantly updated list of violent Trump supporters charged in Trump's Jan 6 insurrection
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Posted: Nov 30, 2021 at 8:12 Quote
Progress is being made and as many as a thousand Trump supporters could be arrested and charged.

With the help of the Sedition Hunters, Federal prosecutors have now charged more than 600 people in more than 40 states with participating in the Jan. 6 riot at the U.S. Capitol, and arrests continue almost daily. The final count could be over 1000, and could include Roger Stone, Steve Bannon, Eric Trump, and of course Donald Trump.
USA TODAY and Business Insider gathered details of those cases as the FBI continues to find and charge those responsible for the attack that left five people dead and sent lawmakers and Vice President Mike Pence fleeing to shelter after Trump supporters became violent in a chaotic struggle.

Included are those arrested on charges federal prosecutors have filed since the riot, and those arrested by Capitol Police and D.C. Metro Police for entering the Capitol or for crimes related to weapons or violence. Check back for updates.

https://www.usatoday.com/storytelling/capitol-riot-mob-arrests/


https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.insider.com/all-the-us-capitol-pro-trump-riot-arrests-charges-names-2021-1%3famp

Posted: Dec 1, 2021 at 4:52 Quote
✳️I knew we would eventually find him because of his distinctive facial scars.

This one is personal because he also tried to kill a Latino in a parking lot at Walgreens.Blank Stare

I want to see ALL of Trumps records involved with Jan 6.

We're getting close⚠️

We're also getting close to 700 arrested associated with Jan 6. Beer



⬇️⬇️⬇️⬇️Check out this Twitter post for the insane details about this violent Trump supporter.⬇️⬇️⬇️⬇️⬇️

https://mobile.twitter.com/ryanjreilly/status/1465710385248358400

Posted: Dec 4, 2021 at 21:05 Quote
We're up to 675

Soon we'll be up to 700 if the hard work of the Sedition Hunters continues. ⚜️⚜️⚜️

Check this fresh tweet announcing the big news.

https://mobile.twitter.com/MacFarlaneNews/status/1467323842322259970

We're having aBeer kegger of beer tonight, the good stuff.


Patriots, continue to check web links above and look for people involved with Jan 6 who you may know. Be a Patriot. ⚕️⚜️

Posted: Dec 7, 2021 at 5:48 Quote
We got a couple more.

✳️Thought he could hide by moving to Sturgis

⚠️♥️Sedition Hunters were at Sturgis hunting for Trump Terrorists:







☑️Sturgis man arrested on Capitol riot charges
James Haffner moved to Sturgis from Seattle after the Jan. 6 riot

The FBI believes the man circled in green on the right is James Haffner of Sturgis. Haffner faces four charges related to the Capitol riot on Jan. 6.(KOTA)
By Jack Siebold
Published: Dec. 3, 2021 at 3:58 PM PST
RAPID CITY, S.D. (KOTA) - A Sturgis man has been arrested on four charges related to the Jan. 6 riot at the U.S. Capitol.

James Haffner, 53, is charged with obstruction of law enforcement during a civil disorder, unlawful entry on restricted buildings or grounds, violent entry and disorderly conduct on Capitol grounds, and assaulting, resisting or impeding officers or employees. Read the federal statement of offense here.

The Federal Bureau of Investigation received a tip two days after the riot that reportedly showed a screenshot of Haffner’s Facebook account, helping in his identification when investigators sifted through thousands of images and videos of the riot. They also used Haffner’s South Dakota driver’s license photograph.

At the time of the riot, Haffner reportedly lived in the Seattle, Wash., area but then moved to Sturgis. He was arrested Wednesday in Pennington County, making his initial court appearance later that day.

Ronald Loehrke, 30, Georgia, is charged in the same complaint. Loehrke also resided in the Seattle area at the time of the riot.

The FBI alleges that Loehrke was in contact with a member of the Proud Boys organization as well as Haffner before the riot. Investigators say the pair marched with that Proud Boy member to the Capitol; joining a crowd that overwhelmed a pedestrian gate and dismantled barricades on the way to the building. Once near the east side doors, Haffner reportedly sprayed officers with an aerosol. Shortly after, rioters breached the doors and entered the Capitol.

On Jan. 6, thousands of people protesting the November presidential election stormed the Capitol where a joint session of Congress was ascertaining and counting the electoral votes.

The actual number of rioters is not known. However, since Jan. 6, the federal government has arrested more than 675 people from nearly all 50 states for crimes related to the event. Of those, 210 have been charged with assaulting or impeding law enforcement.




South Dakota man charged in Jan. 6 riot
Jazzmine Jackson and Dan Santella
3 days ago

SIOUX FALLS, S.D. (KELO) — A South Dakota man was arrested Wednesday in connection to the January 6 riot at the United States Capitol.

53-year-old James Haffner was charged with assaulting, resisting, or impeding certain officers or employees, among other offenses, the Department of Justice has announced. He was arrested in Pennington County and appeared in court on Wednesday.


According to court papers, Haffner lived near Seattle on January 6. Soon after, his South Dakota driver’s license photo was taken. He now lives near Sturgis.

James Haffner pictured at the Sturgis Motorcycle Rally | Photo Courtesy of the U.S. Justice Department


According to court papers, Haffner allegedly helped break down barricades near the capitol and “sprayed an aerosol substance” toward U.S. Capitol Police who were trying to guard Capitol doors.

Federal authorities allege the man on the left is Ronald Loehrke, 30, of Georgia, and the man on the right is James Haffner, 53, from South Dakota. Both are charged with multiple crimes tied to the Jan. 6 riot on Capitol Hill. FBI photos.



2 MORE MEN ACCUSED OF TANGLING WITH COPS DURING CAPITOL HILL RIOT
FIRST RESPONDERS
By Carl Prine | December 06, 2021

Federal agents last week arrested two more men accused of tangling with cops during the Jan. 6 riot on Capitol Hill. Prosecutors say James Haffner, 53, of Sturgis, South Dakota, sprayed some sort of aerosol substance in the face of a police officer, the most serious of the four charges he faces; Ronald Loehrke, 30, of Gainesville, Georgia, was hit with civil disorder and other lower charges.

According to the Justice Department, Haffner, Loehrke, and more than 200 other protesters have been charged with assaulting or impeding law enforcement. That’s a little under a third of the 675 people arrested so far in connection with the breach of the Capitol.

In April, Capitol Police union Chairman Gus Papathanasiou estimated that at least 140 US Capitol Police and Metropolitan Police Department officers were injured during what he termed the Jan. 6 “insurrection.”


Federal agents believe Ethan Nordean, a reputed organizer for the neo-fascist Proud Boys group (circled in red) is linked to Ronald Loehrke (circled in yellow), shown here on Jan. 6, 2021, in Washington, DC. FBI photo.
Both Haffner and Loehrke originally were from Seattle and have been charged together.

According to his FBI arrest warrant, Loehrke was tied to Ethan Nordean, a reputed organizer for the neo-fascist Proud Boys group. FBI agents say Loehrke and Haffner both marched behind Nordean along Constitution Avenue Northwest while the crowd chanted, “f*ck Antifa!” and “Whose streets? Our streets!”

By 1 p.m. on Jan. 6, the crowd had become a mob, sweeping past a small number of US Capitol Police manning waist-high metal barriers near First Street on the Capitol grounds. Federal prosecutors say Haffner and Loehrke joined a group that continued surging past the fencing to a second line of Capitol Police near the West Plaza, and after toppling those barriers they allegedly kept going.

Agents say Haffner and Loehrke were on the front line squaring off with US Capitol Police in riot gear. Loehrke allegedly yelled, “Don’t back down, patriots! The whole f*cking world is watching. Stand the f*ck up today!”


Federal authorities allege this picture shows James Haffner, 53, of South Dakota, spraying some type of aerosol substance on US Capitol Police officers on Jan. 6, 2021, in Washington, DC. FBI photo.
He and Haffner then allegedly moved east, with the mob, toward the Capitol’s East Plaza, where they allegedly helped dismantle more police barricades. Loehrke allegedly was recorded yelling, “Let’s go! Get in there!” before both men moved to the building’s Columbus Doors. It was there that Haffner allegedly “raised up his hand and sprayed an aerosol substance” at a US Capitol Police officer trying to guard the doors, according to the criminal complaint.

Barred by US Magistrate Judge Linda T. Walker in Atlanta from keeping a firearm or ammunition, Loehrke was released Friday from federal custody after posting a $10,000 bond.

US Magistrate Judge Daneta Wollmann in Rapid City, South Dakota, freed Haffner on Dec. 1. Haffner also is blocked from access to firearms or ammunition.

Criminal defense attorneys representing both defendants did not return messages from Coffee or Die Magazine seeking comment.

Posted: Jan 4, 2022 at 16:54 Quote
✅We got another Trump Jail Terrorist!lol Salute


Bodybuilder Rioter Seen Dragging Capitol Cop Down Stairs Is Finally Arrested
SEVEN MONTHS LATER

Lawrence Ukenye
Breaking News Intern
Published Aug. 17, 2021 1:52PM ET

FBI
Seven months after the attack on the U.S. Capitol, a high-profile suspect has finally been arrested by the FBI, HuffPost reports. Photos and footage from Jan. 6 allegedly showed a man in sunglasses and a Caterpillar hoodie dragging a Capitol police officer down the stairs. He became a “white whale” target for ♥️Sedition Hunters♥️, a group of citizen sleuths who have combed through footage from the riot and tracked down the identifies of participants. Sleuths found footage of the man from earlier in the day on Jan. 6 without sunglasses, then used facial recognition to match it to photos of a man named Logan Barnhart on bodybuilding sites and cheap romance novels. They then found old images of Barnhart on his Instagram wearing the same Caterpillar hoodie and carrying the same American flag he had on Jan. 6.

Others who were with Barnhart on Jan. 6 have been arrested including a man who allegedly beat a Capitol cop with a U.S. flag. Prior to being arrested on Tuesday, Barnhart had mocked the FBI’s riot investigation in online posts.


Trump Cancels Jan. 6 Press Conference, Rages at ‘Unselect’ House Committee
EX-POTUS POUTS

Blake Montgomery
Reporter/Editor
Published Jan. 04, 2022 6:42PM ET

Saul Loeb/Getty
Former President Donald Trump has canceled a press conference at Mar-a-Lago scheduled for Jan. 6, the one-year anniversary of his supporters’ insurrection. Trump now says he will discuss the Capitol riot during a rally in Arizona on Jan. 15 instead. The press conference, he said in a statement, was canceled over the work of the House Select Committee investigating the violent mob’s attack. “In light of the total bias and dishonesty of the January 6th Unselect Committee of Democrats, two failed Republicans, and the Fake News Media, I am canceling the January 6th Press Conference at Mar-a-Lago on Thursday

Posted: Jan 6, 2022 at 7:10 Quote
A great analysis of the 725 Trump Terrorists arrested⬇️⬇️


⚛️☸️5 takeaways from the Capitol riot criminal cases, one year later
By TOM DREISBACH, MEG ANDERSON & BARBARA VAN WOERKOM • 17 HOURS AGO
✅Share/Tweet on all social media accounts ❗


In the year since the Jan. 6, 2021, riot at the U.S. Capitol, federal prosecutors have charged more than 700 people related to the attack.

By now, the date is lodged in the collective national memory: Jan. 6, 2021, when hundreds of Trump supporters stormed the U.S. Capitol in an attempt to disrupt the legitimate transfer of power from the former president to whom they had pledged loyalty to current President Biden. Rioters shattered windows, assaulted woefully understaffed police forces and sent lawmakers and aides fleeing in fear of their lives.

In the months since, federal prosecutors have charged more than 700 people related to the attack, with new criminal cases introduced every week. NPR has been tracking each of these, collecting information on the people facing charges and following the eventual outcomes of their cases.

✅Here are some of our main takeaways from that data, one year later.

The alleged rioters came from all over — and most were relatively young
The rioters came to the nation's capital on Jan. 6 from all over the United States. They traveled to Washington, D.C., by bus, plane, train and car, some traveling thousands of miles to get there.

Those facing charges hail from at least 46 states, plus the District of Columbia. So far, no rioters from Nebraska, North Dakota, Vermont or Wyoming appear to have been charged.

Conversely, people from California, Florida, New York, Pennsylvania and Texas account for more than 40% of the rioters charged, with more than 50 rioters coming from each of those five states. It's important to note, however, that those states are also the most populous in the country and that the proportion of rioters from them is not disproportionate.

The group of people charged is difficult to generalize in other ways beyond geography. They work or worked in a wide range of careers, including small-business owners, nurses, teachers, the CEO of a marketing firm and an actor who appeared on the television show Friday Night Lights, among many others.

There does exist one key commonality among the crowd, though it's one that's more difficult to attach a definitive number to: The majority of the rioters appear to be white. Many of those charged also appear to be men, though a sizable minority are women.

The rioters were also relatively young. In contrast to a narrative that many of them were "boomers," at least three-quarters of the rioters charged are under age 55 (the youngest baby boomers are now 57). According to NPR's database, at least 134 people are under age 30.

✅A quarter of those charged are accused of physical violence


Early on, it was clear that the Capitol riot was violent. More than 140 police officers suffered injuries at the hands of the mob. Still, as the Justice Department has released more and more videos of the attack and as additional charges have been filed against rioters, it has become increasingly clear just how violent that day was.

Prosecutors have charged more than 187 people — roughly a quarter of all defendants — with committing violence, such as assaults on law enforcement officers or members of the media present that day.

Capitol Police Sgt. Aquilino Gonell was present for some of the most violent clashes that day. He told members of Congress, "What we were subjected to that day was like something from a medieval battle. We fought hand to hand, inch by inch, to prevent an invasion of the Capitol by a violent mob intent on subverting our democratic process."

Some pro-Trump commentators and politicians have asserted that the rioters were "unarmed." This is false.

"The objects thrown at us varied in size, shape and consistency, some were frozen cans and bottles, rebar from the construction, bricks, liquids, pepper spray, bear spray, sticks of various widths, pipes, bats, some were armed with guns and some had tasers or something similar," one unnamed police officer testified to Congress. "I specifically remember being sprayed with bear spray at least 6-8 times while tussling with rioters who were trying to use the bike racks against us as weapons."

Metropolitan Police Department officer Michael Fanone has said that he was shocked with a Taser several times, which led to a heart attack, and that rioters threatened to take his gun and shoot him with it.

Prosecutors have also cited evidence that some defendants brought firearms to the Capitol grounds, though not inside the building itself. Former Drug Enforcement Administration agent Mark Ibrahim was charged with bringing a gun onto the grounds.

Prosecutors have also presented photos in court documents of Guy Wesley Reffitt with a holster on his belt, which the government has said held a Smith & Wesson pistol.

Judges have also made clear that they are treating allegations of violence against police as among the most serious stemming from the riot. Scott Kevin Fairlamb of New Jersey pleaded guilty to allegations that he shoved and punched a police officer, took a police baton and yelled, "What patriots do? We f****** disarm them and then we storm the f****** Capitol!" U.S. District Judge Royce Lamberth sentenced Fairlamb to almost 3 1/2 years in prison, one of the lengthiest prison terms so far.

✅Many of the accused appear to have military or police backgrounds


A few weeks after the Jan. 6 riot, NPR first reported on the disproportionate share of people facing charges who appeared to have U.S. military histories. Back then, we reported that around 1 in 5 people charged had served or were currently serving in the military, which is nearly three times the proportion of veterans in the general population.

Though the percentage has gone down since that initial reporting, it is still high: Around 13% of those facing charges have military or law enforcement backgrounds. Those facing charges served in nearly every branch of the military, including the Marine Corps, Air Force, Army, Navy and National Guard. Among the accused are current and former police officers from police departments serving places as large as Houston and New York City and as small as Rocky Mount, Va. There were friends who served together in the Marine Corps, a cadet at The Citadel, veterans of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, and at least one recipient of the Purple Heart.

According to an April 2021 report by George Washington University's Program on Extremism, rioters with military experience were about four times more likely to be part of far-right extremist groups like the Oath Keepers and the Proud Boys than rioters without military experience. In the aftermath of Jan. 6, Defense Department spokesperson John Kirby called the riot "a wake-up call" and the prevalence of extremist views among current and former service members "not an insignificant problem." In late December, the department released a report determining that "extremist activity within the Department of Defense is rare, but even the actions of a few can have an outsized impact on unit cohesion, morale and readiness."

✅Dozens are in jail awaiting trial, and some have been there for nearly a year


Most of the alleged rioters are awaiting the resolution of their cases at home, but at least 76 people are being held in pretrial detention. Many of them are charged with more serious crimes, like assault or conspiracy. Some have been held in detention for months, and at least 26 have been there for nearly a year, since January or February of 2021.

Several people facing charges have complained about squalid conditions in the Correctional Treatment Facility in D.C., where around 30 alleged rioters are being held. Many of their complaints over the conditions of the jail were verified in a November report by the U.S. Marshals Service. Those substandard conditions aren't new, according to D.C. Attorney General Karl Racine.

"Concerns about conditions in the jail received little attention until they were raised, of course, by mostly white defendants accused of perpetrating the January 6 insurrection. ... That's not because people weren't complaining," Racine said at a hearing of the D.C. Council's Judiciary and Public Safety Committee after the Marshals Service report.

So far, there have been 74 sentences — and they have varied widely


Judges have handed down sentences in 74 cases so far, and those sentences have varied widely depending on the defendants' actions, criminal history (if any) and whether they expressed remorse for their crimes, among other factors.

At this point, a little more than half (55%) of the people who have been sentenced received no time behind bars. It's important to note, however, that many of the defendants who have pleaded guilty at this stage admitted to lower-level crimes.

U.S. District Judge Trevor McFadden has handed down the most lenient sentences so far, which include no jail: two months of probation for Sean Carlo Cordon of Los Angeles and Danielle Nicole Doyle of Oklahoma City. Each separately admitted to entering the Capitol through a broken window and briefly walking through the building without committing violence or property damage. They both pleaded guilty to "parading, demonstrating, or picketing in a Capitol building," a misdemeanor.

U.S. District Judge Tanya Chutkan handed down the toughest sentence: more than five years in prison for Robert Scott Palmer of Largo, Fla., who admitted to assaulting police with a wooden plank and a fire extinguisher. He pleaded guilty to "assaulting, resisting or impeding certain officers using a dangerous weapon," a felony.

In their remarks at sentencing, judges have frequently acknowledged the "unprecedented" circumstances of an attack on the country's peaceful transfer of power, and that appears to have played a role in some of their decisions.

Jacob Chansley, who is widely known as the "QAnon shaman," breached the Capitol and made it to the floor of the U.S. Senate, but was not accused of committing violence. Nonetheless, Lamberth gave him one of the lengthiest sentences yet: 41 months in prison. "You didn't slug anybody, but what you did here was actually obstruct the functioning of the whole government," said Lamberth. Chansley has taken steps to appeal that sentence.

Chutkan has also said she hopes tough sentences will help deter future political violence.

"Every day we're hearing of anti-democratic factions plotting violence," Chutkan said at Palmer's sentencing. "It has to be made clear that trying to violently overthrow the government, trying to stop the peaceful transfer of power and assaulting law enforcement officers in that effort is going to be met with absolutely certain punishment."

The first trials of Capitol riot defendants are set to begin this year, and there's a good chance they will have a major impact on sentences. Because of the controversial principle known as the "trial penalty," people who take their cases to trial and lose face much stiffer sentences than those who plead guilty. That factor is likely to weigh heavily on the hundreds of people still working their way through the criminal justice system a year after the insurrection.

Photos: Department of Justice; Grapevine (Texas) Police Department via AP (Brock); Win McNamee/Getty Images (Chansley); Montgomery County Jail via AP (Crowl); Mike Theiler/Reuters (Jensen); FBI (Khater); Saul Loeb/AFP via Getty Images (Sherrill)

Copyright 2022 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.
AILSA CHANG, HOST:

Students at several historically Black colleges and universities are being asked to remain vigilant after their campuses were targeted this week with violent threats. Several campuses evacuated, and some students were forced to relocate until authorities said it was safe to return, as NPR's Sarah McCammon reports.

SARAH MCCAMMON, BYLINE: George Cotton had just left campus last night when the alert went out warning students and staff to evacuate because of a bomb threat.

GEORGE COTTON: And literally within minutes, of course, was in contact with the rest of campus just to try and make sure that we were evacuating the campus community.

MCCAMMON: Cotton is vice chancellor for institutional advancement at the University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff, one of about half a dozen historically Black colleges and universities to receive similar threats. He says some students were temporarily relocated off campus while several law enforcement agencies conducted a sweep. Cotton says many students fortunately had not yet returned from winter break, but the threats to multiple HBCUs are especially concerning.

COTTON: You know, so for us, this does point to the fact that this was certainly a coordinated effort, if you will. You know, whether it was a coordinated hoax or whether it was a very sick and coordinated attempt to scare, you know, the HBCU community, we don't know.

CHANG: Bomb threats also were reported at several other HBCU campuses, including Howard University in Washington, D.C., Norfolk State in Virginia and North Carolina Central University, all of which later issued an all-clear. In November, several Ivy League universities received bomb threats on the same day, prompting evacuations and closures. Professor Brian Levin is director of the Center for the Study of Hate and Extremism at California State University, San Bernardino. He says threats to marginalized populations, such as students and staff at HBCUs, have to be taken especially seriously by investigators like the FBI.

BRIAN LEVIN: Because, A, it's moral to do so, B, because we want to make sure that people who do this kind of stuff know that there's going to be a big deterrent follow-up. And lastly, the community needs to be assured that we take this seriously and will follow this to the end.

CHANG: Levin notes that the threats to HBCUs come at a time of increasing reports of hate crimes around the country targeting groups including African Americans. Sarah McCammon, NPR News.

Posted: Jan 12, 2022 at 10:59 Quote
Being a buzzword insurrection, who has been charged with insurrection ?

Posted: Jan 28, 2022 at 0:49 Quote
Look who got PUNKED❗❗❗❗

QANON got Punked❗❗❗❗

You could be next❗

I'm helping arrest Trump supporters in every state❗❗

That right❗

So you better pay attention❗❗

⬇️⬇️⬇️Read all this⬇️⬇️⬇️


Cop PUNK ❗❗

CAPITOL RIOTS
'✅Consumed' by QAnon | Ex-Army private gets 44 months in prison for assaulting police during Capitol riot
Nicholas Languerand, of South Carolina, will serve more than 3 years in prison for assaulting police at the U.S. Capitol on January 6.

Author: Jordan Fischer, Eric Flack, Stephanie Wilson

WASHINGTON — A former U.S. Army private whose obsession with the QAnon conspiracy theory led him to D.C. on January 6 will serve more than three years in prison for assaulting police.

Nicholas Languerand, of Little River, South Carolina, was sentenced Wednesday to 44 months in prison by U.S. District Judge John Bates. Languerand pleaded guilty in November to assaulting police with a dangerous weapon for throwing sticks, a pepper spray canister and a large speaker at officers attempting to defend the U.S. Capitol Building.


Languerand’s attorney, William Welch, painted a picture of his client as a man who’d suffered a tumultuous and abusive childhood. Languerand’s father served six months in prison for blowing up their trailer in an attempt to kill his mother. Languerand later lived with him for a time in a ramshackle home he’d built out of downed telephone poles.

Languerand’s path shared many parallels with another Capitol riot defendant: “QAnon Shaman” Jacob Chansley. Like Chansley, Languerand served in the U.S. Military – Chansley in the Navy, and Languerand as a private in the Army. Languerand was administratively discharged following a positive test for cocaine. Prior to the Capitol riot, Languerand had been laid off from work and had become isolated and “consumed” by the QAnon conspiracy theory, his grandmother told Bates. Languerand said he had even watched some of Chansley’s videos.

“I knew QAnon was pretty far out there,” Languerand’s grandfather said in court Wednesday, “but I didn’t try to heartily dissuade him from listening to them because he was getting engaged in citizenship.”


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Languerand’s grandparents told Bates their plan was to pick him up after the rally in D.C. on January 6 and bring him home to South Carolina where, they hoped, they could get him back on the right path. Instead, when Languerand arrived, he told them the FBI might come looking for him.


Agents eventually did visit in April. In Languerand’s room they found a stockpile of weapons and notes on his cellphone, including one reading, “Dear FBI, if you play nice, so will I. If you shoot my dog, we all will die.”

Investigators also searched the trailer in Vermont where Languerand had been staying. There they found a makeshift target with the rough outline of a human riddled with bullet holes and a notebook with a “target list.”


Assistant U.S. attorney Robert Juman told Bates the evidence showed Languerand was a danger to society, had a “history of violent and threatening conduct” and deserved a 51-month sentence. He acknowledged his troubled youth, but said

“There are many people who have difficult childhoods and who don’t go on to assault police and then brag about it,” Juman says.

In posts on social media after the riot, Languerand wrote that he “got some good shots in” and suggested he return to D.C. with rifles.

“Defendant was not caught up in violence,” Juman said. “He sought it out.”

Before Bates handed down his sentence, Languerand offered a short statement saying he was deeply remorseful.

“I have represented my community in an extremely poor way,” he told the judge.

The statement equivocated less than a letter Languerand submitted to the court, which, Bates said, contained a “mix of excuses and remorse.” In the letter, Languerand blamed the proponents of former President Donald Trump’s election fraud lies for his presence at the Capitol – in particular retired Lt. Gen. Michael Flynn.

“It’s not the complete commitment, disavowal and acceptance of personal responsibility that one might hope to see,” Bates said.

Bates ultimately gave Languerand credit for the circumstances of his upbringing and sentenced him to 44 months in prison – two months below the lower end of the sentencing guideline. The sentence is one of the longest handed down yet in a Capitol riot case. Two other assault defendants, Devlyn Thompson and Robert Scott Palmer, were sentenced to 46 and 63 months, respectively. Chansley, who pleaded guilty to obstruction of an official proceeding, was sentenced in November to 41 months in prison.


Languerand’s attorney asked Bates to recommend the Bureau of Prisons place him in a facility near his grandparents and placement in BOP’s Residential Drug Abuse Program (RDAP).

We're tracking all of the arrests, charges and investigations into the January 6 assault on the Capitol. Sign up for our Capitol Breach Newsletter here so that you never miss an update.

O+
Posted: Jan 28, 2022 at 3:19 Quote
#StillNoInsurectionCharges, #Jan6Patriots

Posted: Jan 29, 2022 at 9:23 Quote
Mostly peaceful protest , they didn’t even burn the place like the anti Americans did in their mostly peaceful protests.

O+
Posted: Feb 4, 2022 at 13:06 Quote
The major channels that love to talk about January 6 and predicted Michael Avenatti would be the next president while they were parading him on their shows every day seven days a week are silent on him just receiving 22 years in federal prison. Go back and look through all sorts of videos of people gushing all over him and saying they are his number one fan. Any person that did an interview pushing Avenatti to the top has no right to even speak on January 6 and they’re mind was made up before they even started opening their mouth.

Also if you go back through most of DCA’s post he was definitely one of the biggest Avenatti fans out there. Just go look at his past post.

Posted: Feb 4, 2022 at 21:42 Quote
krumpdancer101 wrote:
The major channels that love to talk about January 6 and predicted Michael Avenatti would be the next president while they were parading him on their shows every day seven days a week are silent on him just receiving 22 years in federal prison. Go back and look through all sorts of videos of people gushing all over him and saying they are his number one fan. Any person that did an interview pushing Avenatti to the top has no right to even speak on January 6 and they’re mind was made up before they even started opening their mouth.

Also if you go back through most of DCA’s post he was definitely one of the biggest Avenatti fans out there. Just go look at his past post.
those videos are quickly being removed

Posted: Feb 8, 2022 at 7:09 Quote
Another delusional violent Trump supporter struggling with his delusion and going to prison for it.

Conned by Trump. Just like all the other Trumper Dumpster fools who believe believe con man Trump.

❤️ His co workers turned him in and it led to the arrest of others
lol lol lol
#SeditionHunters
#TrumpTerrorists

In Stackhouse’s plea agreement, prosecutors singled out texts he sent to Gianos on Jan. 7, 2021: “don’t regret one thing” and “f--- the government.”

What an idiot.lol lol lol

❤️❤️❤️That helped prosecutors justify his long prison sentence. ❤️❤️❤️

Meanwhile, Trump is still trying hard to be the biggest loser of all time by refusing to get past his landslide loss to President Joe Biden.





Jan. 6 rioter from N.J. who was identified by coworkers pleads guilty
Updated: Feb. 07, 2022, 4:49 p.m. | Published: Feb. 07, 2022, 2:59 p.m.

In an image from the FBI, Lawrence Stackhouse, of New Jersey, right, at a rally in Washington D.C. on Jan. 6, 2021, before the attack on the U.S. Capitol.
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By Kevin Shea | For NJ.com
A Camden County man pleaded guilty Friday to being inside the U.S. Capitol during the Jan. 6, 2021 riot during which mobs of pro-Trump supporters attempted to overturn the general election.

Lawrence Stackhouse, 35, of Blackwood pleaded guilty to a charge of parading, demonstrating or picketing inside the U.S. Capitol in federal court in Washington, D.C. He’d been charged with four crimes.

Stackhouse, who also has addresses in Delaware County, Pennsylvania, faces fines, probation and up to six months in prison when he’s sentenced, scheduled for May 6.


As part of his plea agreement with federal prosecutors, Stackhouse is required to allow law enforcement to review his social media posts from on or around Jan. 6, 2021 and submit to an interview before sentencing.

Stackhouse is the fourth person with New Jersey connections to plead guilty to a Jan. 6 offense.

The FBI arrested Stackhouse last March and said in court papers then that they’d learned of his presence at the Capitol through coworkers, who reported to agents it was “common knowledge” he was there and had called out of work on Jan. 5 and Jan. 6. The company was not named.

One colleague gave the FBI Stackhouse’s cell phone, and another pointed him out when an agent supplied a photo from Capitol surveillance cameras, showing him in a hallway, clad in a Trump beanie hat.

In December, the Stackhouse investigation led the FBI to charge two more suspects, Michael Gianos, 33, of Marlton, and Rachel Myers, 30, of Philadelphia. They’re each charged with two crimes alleging they too were illegally inside the Capitol.


Federal authorities said in December Gianos, Myers and Stackhouse were all together on Jan. 6, and investigators publicized several photos they allege show the trio moving together in the Capitol building. They were also texting with each other that day and afterwards, the FBI said.

In Stackhouse’s plea agreement, prosecutors singled out texts he sent to Gianos on Jan. 7, 2021: “don’t regret one thing” and “f--- the government.”


In this image from the FBI, from inside the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, Michael Gianos, of Evesham, N.J. is seen with fellow suspects Rachel Myers, of Philadelphia, and Lawrence Stackhouse, of Blackwood, N.J.
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