Contact us
Bonewar
Wednesday, March 3, 2021
No Result
View All Result
Bonewar
No Result
View All Result
Bonewar
No Result
View All Result
Home Politics

Judge rips Capitol rioter’s Trump defense

February 23, 2021
Reading Time: 4min read
1
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter


A federal judge is signaling that she’s not a big fan of an increasingly common defense emerging from lawyers for those charged in the Capitol Riot: President Donald Trump made me do it.

RELATED POSTS

Europeans blame EU and national governments for slow coronavirus vaccine rollout

Colbert’s ‘Tooning Out the News’ Pivots to Attack Biden in Season 2

At a bail hearing Tuesday for a Proud Boy member from Kansas accused of storming the Capitol, Chief U.S. District Court Judge Beryl Howell said she was dubious about the legal merit of the effort to shift blame toward the former president and his inflammatory rhetoric about the election.

“This purported defense, if recognized, would undermine the rule of law,” Howell said during the videoconference court session for William Chrestman, 47. “Then, just like a king or a dictator, the president could dictate what would be legal and what isn’t in this country, and that is not how we operate here.”

Lawyers for Chrestman pointed to several Supreme Court cases that they said indicated that guidance from government officials can sometimes be a defense against criminal charges. They said Trump’s encouragement amounted to that kind of all-clear for those who forced their way into the Capitol during the counting of Electoral College votes on Jan. 6.

“Only someone who thought they had an official endorsement would even attempt such a thing. And a Proud Boy who had been paying attention would very much believe he did,” Chrestman’s lawyers, Kirk Redmond and Chekasha Ramsey, wrote in a court filing last week.

The defense attorneys also cited Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell’s statement following Trump’s impeachment trial that those who besieged the Capitol “believed they were acting on the wishes and instructions of their President.”

Howell called the defense argument “quite interesting,” but it quickly became clear she was deeply skeptical of its legal merit. Raising Trump’s famous comment during the 2016 campaign that he could shoot someone on 5th Avenue in New York City and get away with it, she asked the defense lawyers to appreciate the implications of their position.

“If President Trump ordered or instructed a member of the Proud Boys [to] go off and murder somebody and someone went off and did that, it follows that … would immunize them from liability for that criminal act? … In effect, isn’t that what your argument is saying?” the judge asked Redmond.

“I don’t think so. … It’s not going to extend to every defendant,” Redmond replied.

Howell said a 1965 Supreme Court case that Chrestman’s team cited, Cox v. Louisiana, involved an issue of where protesters could stand on a sidewalk and was nothing akin to shutting down a joint session of Congress. “In this case, I would say an instruction from a federal official to disrupt a constitutionally mandated function is far different from a traffic kind of administrative decision,” the judge said.

Chrestman faces a series of felony charges, including conspiracy to interfere with police during civil disorder and to obstruct an official proceeding. He’s also charged with threatening police while carrying a dangerous weapon. Prosecutors say he wielded an axe handle during the riot, using it to block emergency shutters that police were trying to close to protect themselves. They also say he urged the crowd to prevent officers from arresting one of the protesters.

Last week, a federal magistrate judge in Kansas City, Kan., ordered Chrestman’s release to home detention to await trial. On Sunday, however, Howell granted the government’s request to stay that release order while she considered the issue.

Howell has ruled for the release of two defendants whom the government wanted detained, while temporarily blocking a series of releases by magistrates across the country and eventually ordering that some of those people be held until their trials or other resolution of their cases.

At the conclusion of Tuesday’s hearing, Howell said it was evident to her that Chrestman was in the category that he should not be released.

“He cannot be trusted to abide by any condition for release the court might impose instead of pretrial detention,” the judge said. “I don’t find this case to be a close call at all.”

Howell said the fact that Chrestman came to D.C. with “a gas mask, a hard helmet and a club” strongly suggested he was expecting a violent confrontation. She also said his connection to the Proud Boys group meant he was dangerous.

“You call it an organization. I call it a gang,” the judge said to Redmond. “The fact that [Chrestman] continues to be a member of the Proud Boys is danger enough, isn’t it?”

At numerous bail hearings in the Capitol-riot-related cases now flooding the court, just blocks from the site of the Jan. 6 violence, the chief judge has sometimes offered vivid condemnations of the attack and deplored how the episode has disrupted life in the city and the country.

That was the case again Tuesday as Howell lamented the security fencing and the deployment of National Guard troops, while observing that Chrestman’s trip to Washington last month was not taken as an ordinary tourist.

“He was not planning on looking at the sites, which are now totally off limits to citizens living in this city, surrounded by barbed wire,” the judge said. “He wasn’t coming to stroll around the reflecting pool and looking at the sites and the monuments.”

Howell — who served for years as a lawyer for the Senate Judiciary Committee before being appointed to the bench by President Barack Obama in 2010 — suggested that she was eager to see those security eyesores removed but wasn’t sure when or if it will be safe to do so.

“People who want to come visit D.C., Americans who want to come visit their Capitol, are they ever going to able to walk where we used to walk freely?” she asked. “It’s unclear, shockingly unclear.”

————————

Originally published at https://www.politico.com/news/2021/02/23/capitol-rioters-judge-proud-boys-trump-471199 on February 23, 2021 9:04 pm.

Related Posts

EU OKs contract for 300 million more Moderna vaccine doses

Europeans blame EU and national governments for slow coronavirus vaccine rollout

March 3, 2021

More than half of Germans polled said the European Union has handled the vaccine rollout badly.

Colbert’s ‘Tooning Out the News’ Pivots to Attack Biden in Season 2

Colbert’s ‘Tooning Out the News’ Pivots to Attack Biden in Season 2

March 3, 2021

Paramount PlusOver the past six weeks or so, late-night shows have been struggling to figure out how to make comedy...

Stephen Colbert Fires Back at Fox News and Don Jr.’s Dr. Seuss Freakout

Stephen Colbert Fires Back at Fox News and Don Jr.’s Dr. Seuss Freakout

March 3, 2021

CBSIf you happened to catch any hour of Fox News over the past couple of days, you may be under...

CNN: Pentagon watchdog says Ronny Jackson drank on duty and harassed staff

CNN: Pentagon watchdog says Ronny Jackson drank on duty and harassed staff

March 3, 2021

Rep. Ronny Jackson (R-Texas) allegedly made "sexual and denigrating" comments about a female staffer, drank alcohol and took sleeping medication...

‘QAnon Shaman’ Jake Angeli Turned on Trump But Feds Say Remorse Is ‘No Match’ for Evidence

‘QAnon Shaman’ Jake Angeli Turned on Trump But Feds Say Remorse Is ‘No Match’ for Evidence

March 3, 2021

Federal prosecutors have said that "QAnon Shaman" Jacob Chansley's statements of remorse for his involvement in the January 6 riots...

Next Post
Video Shows Tiger Woods Golfing With Dwyane Wade Day Before Crash

Video Shows Tiger Woods Golfing With Dwyane Wade Day Before Crash

Lawrence Ferlinghetti, poet and activist, dies at 101

Lawrence Ferlinghetti, poet and activist, dies at 101

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

RECOMMENDED

EU OKs contract for 300 million more Moderna vaccine doses

Europeans blame EU and national governments for slow coronavirus vaccine rollout

March 3, 2021
Colbert’s ‘Tooning Out the News’ Pivots to Attack Biden in Season 2

Colbert’s ‘Tooning Out the News’ Pivots to Attack Biden in Season 2

March 3, 2021

MOST VIEWED

  • Cherie DeVille’s 12 Steps to Become the Next Big Porn Star

    Cherie DeVille’s 12 Steps to Become the Next Big Porn Star

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • A Grieving Son’s Open Letter to Jet-Setting South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Oh, The Places Ivanka Won’t Go

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • ‘Stop the Steal’ MAGA Fanatics Reach Their Death Cult Finale

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Biden Names Susan Rice, Denis McDonough to Key Jobs

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
Bonewar

© 2020 Bonewar

No Result
View All Result
  • Homepages
    • Homepage Layout 1
    • Homepage Layout 2
  • Politics
  • World
  • Business
  • Science
  • National
  • Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Fashion
  • Lifestyle
  • Travel
  • Tech
  • Health
  • Food

© 2020 Bonewar