Ex-police officer and Proud Boys member gets 14 months in prison for
joining Capitol attack
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[January 09, 2025]
WASHINGTON (AP) — A former police officer who stormed the
U.S. Capitol with fellow members of the far-right Proud Boys extremist
group was sentenced on Wednesday to 14 months in prison for joining the
Jan. 6, 2021, attack by a mob of Donald Trump supporters, court records
show.
Nathaniel Tuck and other Proud Boys, including his father, were among
the first wave of rioters who entered Capitol grounds after the mob
broke through police lines, according to prosecutors.
Tuck, 32, of Apopka, Florida, pushed past police officers to enter the
Capitol and berated officers who were trying to hold off the crowd. He
later posed with other Proud Boys members for a celebratory photograph
outside the Capitol.
"Nathaniel Tuck prepared for and took these actions as part of a
hand-selected group of Proud Boys members that openly discussed its
plans for violence at the Capitol and intention to confront police who
might try to stand in their way," prosecutors wrote in a court filing.
U.S. District Judge Timothy Kelly allowed Tuck to remain free until he
must report to prison and begin serving his 14-month sentence. The judge
also ordered him to pay a $2,000 fine and $2,000 in restitution, court
records show.
More than 1,500 people have been charged with Capitol riot-related
crimes. Dozens of them were leaders, members and associates of the Proud
Boys.
The president-elect has repeatedly vowed to pardon Capitol rioters once
he returns the White House later this month. But he hasn't specified
whether pardons would extend to rioters convicted of engaging in
violence or destruction.
Tuck pleaded guilty in September to a felony charge of obstructing law
enforcement during a civil disorder and a misdemeanor charge of entering
and remaining in a restricted area.
Prosecutors recommended a two-year prison sentence for Tuck, who was a
member of the Proud Boys' “Space Coast” chapter based in central
Florida.
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This image from police-worn body camera, and provided and annotated
by the Justice Department, in the sentencing memo for Nathaniel
Tuck, shows Tuck, circled in yellow, inside the U.S. Capitol Jan. 6,
2021, in Washington. (Department of Justice via AP)
From 2012 to 2020, Nathaniel Tuck served as a police officer, in
Longwood, Florida, and then in Apopka. He joined the Proud Boys in
2018, prosecutors said.
Tuck told a federal probation officer that he quit his police job in
October 2020 “because of the whole George Floyd thing,” according to
prosecutors.
Tuck was charged with his father, Kevin, who is scheduled to be
sentenced next Tuesday. Kevin Tuck, 52, was a Proud Boys member and
employed as a police officer in Windermere, Florida, at the time of
the riot. The elder Tuck pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor.
The Tucks traveled to Washington, D.C., and attacked the Capitol
with other Proud Boys members who also have been convicted of Jan. 6
charges.
Defense attorney William Shipley said Nathaniel Tuck didn't engage
in any violence or damage any property at the Capitol.
“He primarily remained a singular member of a much larger group of
individuals, and mostly observed the conduct of others,” Shipley
wrote.
The Proud Boys was a group best known for street fights with
anti-fascist activists when Trump infamously told the Proud Boys to
“stand back and stand by” during his first debate in 2020 with
then-presidential candidate Joe Biden.
The group's former top leader, Enrique Tarrio, and three of his
lieutenants were convicted of seditious conspiracy for a violent
plot to stop the peaceful transfer of presidential power from Trump
to Biden after the 2020 election. Tarrio is serving a 22-year prison
sentence, the longest of any Capitol riot case.
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