First rioters to breach a police perimeter during Capitol siege are
sentenced to prison terms
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[September 20, 2024]
By MICHAEL KUNZELMAN and ALANNA DURKIN RICHER
WASHINGTON (AP) — Four men who were among the first rioters to assault
police officers and the first to breach a security perimeter during the
attack on the U.S. Capitol were sentenced on Thursday to prison terms
ranging from one year of intermittent confinement over weekends to eight
years behind bars.
Before handing down the punishments, U.S. District Judge Jia Cobb
decried misinformation being spread in the public about the riot and
efforts to downplay the violence that left more than 100 police officers
injured.
Cobb said the “temperature remains too high," citing threats against
public officials and the apparent assassination attempts targeting
former President Donald Trump. The judge said it “scares” her to think
about what could happen after the next election.
“Not in my lifetime have I seen a situation where the peaceful transfer
of power was threatened like it was on Jan. 6,” she said.
Stephen Randolph, a certified nursing assistant, was sentenced to eight
years in prison. James Grant, who was accepted to the University of
Alabama’s School of Law before his arrest, was sentenced to three years.
Jason Blythe, a delivery driver, was sentenced to two years and six
months. Paul Johnson, who owns a tree removal business, was sentenced to
one year of intermittent confinement over weekends followed by two years
of home confinement.
They were all convicted of felony offenses for their roles in the Jan.
6, 2021, siege. A fifth co-defendant, Ryan Samsel, will be sentenced on
a date yet to be determined.
The five men didn't know each other before they converged on a traffic
circle outside the Capitol. But prosecutors say they spearheaded the
first assault on police officers guarding the Capitol from a crowd of
Donald Trump supporters.
At Peace Circle, the co-defendants lifted two metal bike racks into the
air and drove them into a police line, striking Capitol Police Officer
Caroline Edwards in her face. Edwards slammed her head against a metal
handrail, knocking her unconscious and giving her a concussion.
Randolph then jumped over the barricade, grabbed Capitol Police Officer
David Cruz and pulled him toward the crowd before another officer
intervened.
The breach at the Peace Circle “opened the floodgates” for thousands of
rioters to storm the Capitol, prosecutors said.
“The importance of this initial breach cannot be overstated,” they
wrote.
Prosecutors recommended sentencing Randolph to 11 years and three months
in prison. They asked for Blythe, Grant and Johnson to be sentenced to
nine years behind bars.
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Attorneys for Randolph, Blythe, Grant and Johnson said their clients
regret taking part in the Jan. 6 riot.
“I'll forever regret my decision to approach the fence that day,” a
tearful Randolph said of the bike rack barriers that separated the
police from rioters.
Grant's attorney, Robert Feitel, called it “almost incomprehensible"
that prosecutors would seek such a lengthy sentence for the man.
Grant has been behind bars since January 2022 after he was charged
with driving while drunk with an assault rifle in his car and will
get credit for the time he has already spent locked up.
“I think I've been sufficiently punished,” Grant told the judge.
Grant's attorney said he should be eligible for release almost
immediately after getting credit for time served and good behavior
in jail. The judge ordered Blythe and Randolph to be taken into
custody immediately after their sentencing hearing.
Johnson and Blythe both turned to apologize to two Capitol police
officers who were sitting in the courtroom.
“I stand for you guys,” Johnson said. “I don't know where my mind
was that day.”
“I'm sincerely sorry for what I did,” Blythe said.
The co-defendants' conduct wasn't limited to the first breach.
Randolph, 34, of Harrodsburg, Kentucky, stayed at the Capitol for
hours on Jan. 6, climbing to the Upper West Terrace and watching
other rioters assault police officers guarding a tunnel entrance.
Blythe, 29, of Fort Worth, Texas, had to be forcibly removed by
police as he resisted their efforts to clear him and other rioters
from the Upper West Terrace.
Grant, 31, of Cary, North Carolina, climbed into the Capitol through
a broken window and entered a senator’s office. After his arrest, he
told investigators that the FBI was “the biggest threat to
Americans” and that prosecuting Jan. 6 rioters was “a big witch
hunt.”
Johnson, 39, of Lanexa, Virginia, used a megaphone to exhort other
rioters to attack, yelling at others to “get on the front lines.”
After the initial breach, he continued to “rally rioters at
strategically significant points,” prosecutors said.
“Johnson not only dictated orders akin to a military commander, he
also engaged in combat against officers,” they wrote.
In February, Cobb presided over a trial without a jury before she
convicted the co-defendants of charges including obstructing police
during a civil disorder.
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