Proud Boys 'took aim' at U.S. democracy, prosecutor tells Jan. 6 trial
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[January 13, 2023]
By Andrew Goudsward and Sarah N. Lynch
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. prosecutors on Thursday accused leaders of
the far-right Proud Boys group of plotting an assault on American
democracy as one of the most high-profile trials to stem from the Jan.
6, 2021 Capitol attack got underway.
In an opening argument, federal prosecutor Jason McCullough told jurors
that Proud Boys chairman Henry "Enrique" Tarrio and four other leaders
engaged in sedition by using force to try to keep Donald Trump in office
after he lost the 2020 presidential election.
"On January 6, they took aim at the heart of our democracy," McCullough
told jurors.
Defendants' lawyers said it was Trump, not the Proud Boys, who spurred
thousands of supporters to attack the Capitol.
"He’s the one that told them to march over to the Capitol and fight like
hell. Enrique didn’t say that," said Sabino Jauregui, a lawyer for
Tarrio.
The case marks the third time that the Justice Department has charged
members of extremist groups with the rarely prosecuted crime of
seditious conspiracy, after Trump supporters invaded the Capitol in a
failed bid to prevent lawmakers from certifying his November 2020
election loss to Biden.
Oath Keepers founder Stewart Rhodes and another chapter leader of the
far-right militant group were found guilty of seditious conspiracy in
November, and another trial is pending against four more members.
The Civil War-era law, which prohibits people from plotting to overthrow
or destroy the U.S. government, carries a penalty of up to 20 years in
prison.
When it became clear that Trump would not win re-election, "these men
did not stand back. They did not stand by. Instead they mobilized,"
McCullough said, paraphrasing a comment Trump made in a debate before
the election that the Proud Boys should "stand back and stand by."
All five Proud Boys defendants have pleaded not guilty and their
attorneys will argue that they did not plot to block the peaceful
transfer of power.
Prosecutors have brought criminal charges against more than 950 people
following the assault. Four people died during the chaos, and five
police officers died of various causes after the attack.
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A U.S. Supreme Court police officer
stands between flag waving supporters of those arrested in the
January 6, 2021 attack on the U.S. Capitol and counter protestors to
avoid conflict during a demonstration held between the U.S. Supreme
Court and the U.S. Capitol Building on the 2nd anniversary of the
attack in Washington, U.S. January 6, 2023. REUTERS/Jon Cherry
Under Special Counsel Jack Smith, the Justice Department is also
investigating efforts by Trump's advisers to overturn his election
defeat.
In the Proud Boys case, the government accuses Tarrio and four other
group members, some of whom led state chapters, of purchasing
paramilitary gear for the attack and urging members of the
self-described "Western chauvinist group" to descend on Washington.
They say Tarrio directed the attack from Baltimore because he had
been ordered to stay out of Washington after being arrested on Jan.
4 for burning a Black Lives Matter banner at a historic
African-American church in December 2020.
Prosecutors say Tarrio met with Rhodes, the Oath Keeper founder, at
an underground parking garage after being released from custody.
Prosecutors accuse the four other defendants - Nordean, Joseph
Biggs, Zachary Rehl and Dominic Pezzola - of being among the first
members of the crowd to charge past the barricades that had been
erected to protect the Capitol.
A fifth member of the group, North Carolina chapter leader Charles
Donohoe, pleaded guilty to other charges in April 2022 and could
potentially be called as a witness in the case.
Biggs and Nordean are accused of tearing down a black metal fence
that separated the crowd from police, Donohoe of throwing water
bottles at police, and Pezzola with grabbing an officer's riot
shield.
The indictment said Pezzola used the stolen shield to break a
window, allowing members of the mob to enter the Capitol.
(Reporting by Andrew Goudsward and Sarah N. Lynch; Editing by Andy
Sullivan and Alistair Bell)
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