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		Former police officer stands trial for role in U.S. Capitol violence
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		 [April 27, 2022] 
		By Jan Wolfe 
 WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A trial kicked off 
		on Tuesday for a veteran of the New York Police Department accused of 
		assaulting a police officer during the Jan. 6, 2021, violence at the 
		U.S. Capitol, in the latest test for prosecutors trying to add to a 
		streak of convictions.
 
 At the trial's opening, jurors saw video footage showing Thomas Webster, 
		56, striking a police officer with a flagpole before tackling the 
		officer to the ground.
 
 "This is a case about a former officer violently attacking a fellow 
		officer," prosecutor Hava Mirell told jurors, adding that Webster was 
		"rage-filled" when he taunted and attacked the overwhelmed officer.
 
 Webster's defense lawyer, showing the incident from another camera 
		angle, told jurors that the officer "instigated" the incident by 
		punching Webster in the face.
 
 The officer "started the whole thing — that's the truth," the defense 
		lawyer, James E. Monroe, told the jury.
 
		
		 
		Of the four Capitol riot defendants to face trial so far, Webster is the 
		first to argue he was acting in self-defense.
 According to court filings, Webster served in the Marine Corps before 
		spending about 20 years with the New York Police Department.
 
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			The U.S. flag flies over the U.S. Capitol in Washington, D.C., U.S. 
			April 26, 2022. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst/File Photo 
            
			 Webster drove to Washington on Jan. 
			5, 2021, stayed at a hotel overnight, and then attended former 
			President Donald Trump's political rally in front of The White House 
			on Jan. 6.
 Along with thousands of other Trump supporters, Webster walked over 
			to the Capitol building, where lawmakers were certifying President 
			Joe Biden's election victory.
 
 He was arrested in February 2021 and allowed release from jail while 
			he awaited trial.
 
 About 800 people face criminal charges relating to the Jan. 6 riot 
			at the Capitol, which disrupted a joint sessions of the U.S. 
			Congress and sent lawmakers into hiding. There have been about 250 
			guilty pleas so far.
 
 Prosecutors have obtained convictions in all three jury trials so 
			far, but have had a mixed record in non-jury trials.
 
 (Reporting by Jan Wolfe; editing by Andy Sullivan, Alexandra Hudson)
 
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