Man serving 30 years for attacking Nancy Pelosi’s husband gets a life
term on state charges
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[October 30, 2024]
By JANIE HAR
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — The man who was sentenced to 30 years in federal
prison for attacking the husband of former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi
with a hammer in their California home was given a life term without the
possibility of parole on Tuesday following a separate state trial.
A San Francisco jury in June found David DePape guilty of charges
including aggravated kidnapping, first-degree burglary and false
imprisonment of an elder.
Before sentencing DePape to life for the kidnapping conviction, Judge
Harry Dorfman rejected defense attorneys' arguments that he be granted a
new state trial for the 2022 attack against Paul Pelosi, who was 82
years old at the time.
“It’s my intention that Mr. DePape will never get out of prison, he can
never be paroled," Dorfman said while handing out the punishment. He
later said, "I don’t feel sympathy for you. I feel sympathy for the
victim in this case, who’s lucky to be alive.”
Adam Lipson, a San Francisco deputy public defender, had asked Dorfman
to consider DePape’s mental health and isolation that made him
susceptible to online propaganda.
“This is a man who has always been a peaceful, law-abiding person up
until his activation,” Lipson said before the punishment was handed
down.
When given the chance to address the court prior to his sentencing,
DePape, dressed in prison orange and with his brown hair in a ponytail,
spoke at length about Sept. 11 being an inside job, his ex-wife being
replaced by a body double, and his government-provided attorneys
conspiring against him.
“I’m a psychic,” DePape told the court, reading from sheets of paper.
“The more I meditate, the more psychic I get.”
The judge interrupted DePape multiple times to ask if he wanted to
address the jury's verdict or his conduct on the night of the attack,
but DePape ignored the offers.
In a letter read in court by the victim's daughter, Christine Pelosi,
Paul Pelosi called for the maximum sentence, saying the “last peaceful
sleep” he had ended abruptly “when the defendant violently broke into my
home, burst into my bedroom and stood over my bed with a hammer and zip
ties demanding to see my wife, yelling ‘Where’s Nancy?’”
He said the attack left him with bumps on his head, a metal plate in it,
dizziness and nerve damage in his left hand. Sleeping alone at home
evokes memories of the attack, he said.
In a statement after Tuesday's sentencing, the Pelosi family said that
after a grueling two years, “legal justice has been served.”
“Today’s sentence of life without parole gives our Pop some measure of
legal justice and, we hope, a message to others that political violence
against elected officials or their family members will not be tolerated,
minimized or condoned," the statement said. "We must each do our part to
build a peaceful democracy.”
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David DePape, who bludgeoned Nancy Pelosi's husband with a hammer,
is seen, Dec. 13, 2013, in Berkeley, Calif. (Michael Short/San
Francisco Chronicle via AP, File)
Previously, a federal jury convicted DePape of assaulting a federal
official’s family member and attempting to kidnap a federal
official. In May, he was sentenced to 30 years in federal prison.
Although DePape expressed remorse for his actions at the federal
sentencing, he did not do that on Tuesday. Judges in both cases said
they could not ignore the seriousness of targeting elected
officials.
Judge Dorfman on Tuesday also sentenced DePape to additional years
on the other counts, but all the sentences, including the federal
one, will run concurrently. He said that if an appellate court
overturns his sentence of life without parole, he will ask that the
case be sent back to his court for resentencing.
Lipson told reporters after the hearing that he will appeal the
ruling. “This was a really tragic end to a tragic story,” he said.
The prosecutors, San Francisco assistant district attorneys Sean
Connolly and Phoebe Maffei, said in a statement that the sentence
reflects the seriousness of DePape's conduct and the harm he
inflicted on an innocent man.
“There is no rejoicing in such cases. There are no winners," it
said.
The defense argued that the state trial amounted to double jeopardy,
saying that although the state and federal counts weren't exactly
the same, the two cases stem from the same act. The judge dismissed
some of the state charges, but he kept others that weren't covered
by the federal case.
The Oct. 28, 2022, attack on Paul Pelosi was captured on police body
camera video just days before the midterm elections and shocked the
political world. He suffered head wounds, including a skull fracture
that was mended with plates and screws.
DePape, a Canadian citizen who has been living in the U.S. for
years, admitted during his federal trial that he planned to hold
Nancy Pelosi hostage, record his interrogation of her, and “break
her kneecaps” if she did not admit to the lies he said she told
about “Russiagate,” a reference to the investigation into Russian
interference in the 2016 presidential campaign.
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