Two to be sentenced for roles in Jan. 6 attack on U.S. Capitol police
officer
Send a link to a friend
[January 27, 2023]
By Sarah N. Lynch
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Two men will be sentenced on Friday for their
roles in the pepper-spray assault of a U.S. Capitol police officer who
died the day after the Jan. 6, 2021, riot, whose family are asking the
judge to impose the harshest possible penalty on his attackers.
Prosecutors are seeking a 7-1/2 year prison term for Julian Khater, 32,
who deployed the pepper spray against Officer Brian Sicknick and two
other police officers and pleaded guilty last year to two counts of
assaulting police.
Sicknick died of a stroke the next day. Although the medical examiner,
Francisco J. Diaz, later attributed his death to natural causes, he told
the Washington Post he believed "all that transpired" on Jan. 6, 2021,
played a role in his death.
Thousands of Donald Trump's supporters stormed the Capitol that day in
an attempt to overturn his election loss.
George Tanios, 41, of Morgantown, West Virginia, pleaded guilty last
year to lesser misdemeanor charges of disorderly conduct on restricted
grounds, and prosecutors are asking the judge to give him credit for
time served in pre-trial detention. His lawyers have told the judge
their client "deeply regrets" his actions.
Ahead of Friday's sentencing, Sicknick's family members submitted
letters to U.S. District Judge Thomas Hogan, asking him to impose the
harshest possible sentences.
"I don't know what kind of upbringing you had ... what might have
happened in your childhood that contributed to your deluded sense of
right and wrong," Sicknick's mother Gladys Sicknick wrote, addressing
her son's attacker. "If I were your mother, I'd be embarrassed to have a
son like you. I couldn't bear to look at you -- ever again. Which is how
I feel right now. Let this be the last time, Mr. Khater."
In his letter, Brian Sicknick's brother Kenneth Sicknick refused to call
both defendants by their names.
"Humans have names. Dogs have names. Pet rocks are given names. The two
defendants are not worthy of having names or being addressed as such,"
he wrote.
[to top of second column]
|
Security fencing is seen near the U.S.
Capitol ahead of an expected rally Saturday in support of the
January 6 Capitol attack defendants in Washington, U.S. September
17, 2021. REUTERS/Michael Weekes
Khater and Tanios are two of the more than 950 people who have been
charged in connection with the assault on the Capitol. Four
participants died during the chaos and five police officers,
including Sicknick, died afterward, some by suicide.
Prosecutors have said Tanios drove from his home in West Virginia to
pick Khater up in New Jersey before proceeding to Washington ahead
of the riot.
After attending a rally, they joined the mob heading towards the
Capitol, though there is no evidence they planned to enter the
building or block the certification of electoral votes.
They arrived with two canisters of bear spray, which they did not
use, and two containers of pepper-spray, one of which Khater did
use.
In a video, Khater can be heard saying "Give me that bear shit"
before reaching into Tanios' backpack.
"Office Sicknick's tragic demise, so close in time to the traumatic
events of that day, underscores the seriousness of the offense
committed by Khater," prosecutors wrote in their sentencing memo to
the judge.
Khater's attorney is also asking the judge to impose a sentence of
time served, noting his client has been locked up since his March
2021 arrest, has been subjected to "inhumane conditions," and
already suffers from anxiety dating to his family's escape from
Lebanon during the Israel-Hezbollah war.
"Whether it was simply the heat of that moment or the addition of
some trauma which still lingered from having fled Lebanon while
under bombardment, something in Julian was triggered," his attorney
Chad Seigel wrote in his sentencing memo to the judge.
(Reporting by Sarah N. Lynch; Editing by Scott Malone and Daniel
Wallis)
[© 2023 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |