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10.18 in
Attention: Zamora Olga
CITY OF MIAMI - HEARING BOARDS
444 SW 2ND AVENUE, 3RD FLOOR
MIAMI, FL 331301910
OZamora@miamigov.com
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MIAMI--BALD I
TUESDAY JANUARY 77075
The Jan. 6 rioters, 4 years later
NTT Neon Service
In the past four years,
nearly 1,600 people have
been prosecuted in connec-
tion with the storming of
the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021.
Some were accused of
felonies such as assault or
seditious conspiracy and
are still in prison. But hun-
dreds charged with lesser
crimes have wrapped up
their cases and returned to
their lives.
Jan. 6 was a turning point
for everyone involved. In
breaching the Capitol, a
mob of Trump loyalists
caused millions of dollars in
damage, injured more than
140 police officers and, for
the first time in U.S. histo-
ry, chased lawmakers away
from their duty to certify a
presidential election.
The attack also prompted
the largest single investiga-
tion the Justice Department
has ever umdertaken, lead-
ing to arrests in all 50
states. Ever since, the de-
fendants have been held to
account in Washington's
federal courthouse, blocks
away from the Capitol
itself, for their roles in In-
dermining a bedrock of
democracy, the peaceful
transfer of power.
While some have come to
regret their actions on that
day, others do not. At best,
they say they have seen the
realities of the criminal -
justice system, becoming
more sympathetic to the
plights of others facing
prosecution. At worst, they
remain convinced that the
system treated them unfair-
ly, hardened by their brush-
es with the law.
The judges who have
overseen Capitol riot cases
have routinely pushed back
on that idea.
"l have been shocked to
watch some public figures
try to rewrite history,
claiming rioters behaved in
an orderly fashion' like
ordinary tourists, or marty-
rizing convicted Jan. 6
defendants as `political
prisoners' or even, incred-
ibly, 'hostages,' " Judge
Royce C. Lamberth, a Rea-
gan appointee, said in court
last year. "That is all pre-
posterous."
Still, President-elect
Donald Trump has prom-
ised to pardon many, may-
be most, of the rioters as
soon as he takes office and
could shut down the broad
investigation into the Capi-
tol attack. Here are the
experiences of some defen-
dants accused of relatively
minor crimes four years
after Jan. 6.
ERIC CLARK
On Jan. 6, Eric Clark was
three years sober and had
more or less settled into a
middle-class life as a ma-
chine operator in Louis-
ville, Kentucky, after years
of battling homelessness
and drug addiction.
But the belief that Trump
won the 2020 election led
him to illegally enter the
Capitol in a Guy Fawkes
mask and refuse to leave
for nearly 30 minutes.
Clark was sentenced to five
months in prison. Now 48,
he is working on a drywall -
cleanup crew, trying to put
his life back together.
His one great success, he
said, is the relationship he
has rebuilt with his daugh-
ter —even though it was
she who turned him in to
authorities to begin with.
"Instead of being mad at
her," he said, "I've chosen
to accept that she has her
viewpoint and I have
TRENISS EVANS
Treniss Evans said he
wasn't all that interested in
politics before the 2020
election. He has become
steeped in the subject since
Jan. 6, when he stepped
through a broken Capitol
window and used a mega-
phone to lead other rioters
in the Pledge of Allegiance
and national anthem.
Evans, who is 50 and
lives near San Antonio, was
sentenced to 20 days in
prison after pleading guilty
to entering the Capitol's
Vice President Kassala Harris and Speaker of the House Mike Johnson preside over a joinl
session of Congress to certify the results of the 2024 presidential election on Monday.
FROM PAGE 1A
HARRIS
count to her with the hon-
orific "Madam President,"
as Harris served in her
capacity as president of the
Senate.
After just 30 minutes,
Harris concluded the tally:
"Donald J. Trump from the
state of Florida has re-
ceived 312 votes," she said
as the House erupted into
applause. She smiled wide-
ly and, after a moment,
hammered her gavel to call
the chamber to order.
Then, she announced her
own results: "Kamala D.
Harris from the state of
California has received 226
votes."
Again, the chamber
burst into cheers as her
Democratic colleagues
gave Harris a standing
ovation. Once again,the
vice president smiled and,
after a moment, ham-
mered the gavel for order.
Harris, who lost her bid
for the presidency just two
months ago, posted a video
earlier Monday asserting
that she would fulfill her
duty under the Constitu-
tion to preside over the
certification. Harris joins a
small club of vire presi-
dents who lost their bids
for president and were
required to certify the
results — among them Al
Gore and Richard Nixon.
"The peaceful transfer of
power is one of the most
fundamental principles of
American democracy,"
Harris said. "As we have
seen, our democracy can
be fragile. And it is up to,
then, each one of us to
stand up for our most cher-
ished principles, and to
make sure that in America,
our government always
remains of the people, by
the people and for the
people."
What was once a per-
functory duty of Congress
— certifying the Electoral
College votes from all
states — became an in-
temational debacle in
2021, when people upset
about Trump's reelection
defeat in 2020 forced their
way into the Capitol to
diseupt the process.
The riot, which unfolded
on live television, immedi-
ately drew bipartisan con-
demnation. House leaders
convened a committee to
investigate the Jan. 6 riot-
ers and law enforcement
from across the country
Grant a wish and
make a difference!
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To donate online, visit
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restricted grounds. Like
other rioters, he emerged
from the experience fo-
cused less on his own cul-
pability than on the larger
travails of being subject to
criminal prosecution.
In the past four years, he
has spent much of his time
on a group he founded,
Condemned USA, which
provides legal support and
public advocacy to hun-
dreds of others who took
part in the Capitol attack.
"I used to believe in our
judicial system," he said,
"but now I see what gener-
ations upon generations of
minorities and people of
lower income have been
complaining about."
JAMES BEEKS
When James Seeks went
to Washington on Jan. 6
with the Oath Keepers
militia, his chosen profes-
sion distinguished him
from many of his com-
patriots in the far -right
group, which played a
central role in breaching
the Capitol. Reeks was a
five -time Broadway per-
former reprising the part of
Judas in the 50th-anni-
versary production of "Je-
sus Christ Superstar."
After being accused in a
conspiracy indictment of
forcibly entering the Capi-
tol in a military -style
"stack" with other Oath
Keepers, Reeks was found
cracked down, leading to
hundreds of convictions.
But dueling political narra-
tives quickly took hold.
By the time of the 2024
election, Trump had char-
acterized Jan. 6, 2021, as
"a day of love"and prom-
ised to pardon many of the
rioters. Family members
and supporters of those
arrested after Jan. 6 fre-
quently attended Trump's
campaign events.
Democrats used the Jan
6 attacks as evidence of a
fragile democracy at risk of
not guilty by a judge who
ruled that the evidence did
not support the charges.
He was one of only two
of the dozens of Jan. 6
defendants who have gone
to trial and been fully ac-
quitted. But despite being
cleared in the case, he said,
his life has not gone back to
normal.
He is living in a friend's
van in Florida, finishing a
book about his experience,
"I Am Judas Redeemed."
He has not returned to the
stage since his arrest.
"I still have this J6 scar-
let letter on my chest," he
said.
JENNA RYAN
Jenna Ryan was a real-
estate broker and social -
media influencer in the
Dallas area when she en-
tered the Capitol on Jan. 6,
praying and chanting
"Fight for Trump!" with a
crowd in the Rotunda.
The next day, she posted
message on Twitter,
saying: "We just stormed
the Capitol. It was one of
the best days of my life."
All of that ultimately led
to a 60-day prison term.
She claims that she was
treated harshly because of
her "public profile" as a
Jan. 6 defendant But bang
sentenced for illegally
demonstrating in the Capi-
tol also allowed her to
fulfill what she describes as
her "lifelong goal of being
a writer and a speaker."
Ryan, 54, has written
book called "Storming the
toppling under a second
Trump administration.
President Joe Biden and
Vice President Harris fre-
quently portrayed Trump
as a danger to democracy
—though Republicans
threw the insult back,
alleging that Democrats
stole the 2020 election.
Democrats, who clearly
lost in November, ham-
mered a familiar line Mon-
day. We are not sore los-
ers.
House Minority Leader
Hakeem Jeffries, D-N.Y.,
Capitol: My Troth About
January 6th"which she
says "shows how it feels to
be caught in the middle of
a polarized political cli-
mate, canceled by society,
surveilled by the FBI and
thrown in prison for a
tweet."
JACOB CHANSLEY
Few people are more
visibly associated with the
Capitol attack than Jacob
Chansley, the so-called
QAnon Shaman who en-
tered the building in face
paint and a homed head-
dress while brandishing an
American flag on a spear -
tipped flagpole.
Moving with the first
wave of rioters, he left a
threatening note on the
Senate floor for Vice Presi-
dent Mike Pence, who had
to be hustled to safety as
the mob overwhelmed the
Capitol.
Yet, like others who
disrupted the election
certification that day,
Chansley seeks to cast the
41-month sentence he
received as "experiencing
tyranny firsthand." Even
after his release, he main-
tains Jan. 6 was "a setup"
by the government and
that public officials and the
news media have painted
him as a "villain and a
terrorist."
Still, Chansley, 37, said
his day-to-day life in Phoe-
nix art remains
much the same as before
that day — "other than I get
more interviews now."
gave a somber message in
a statement Monday morn-
ing: "History will always
remember the attempted
insurrection and we will
never allow the violence
that unfolded in plain sight
to be whitewashed."
Several deep layers of
security surrounded the
Capitol buildings Monday
morning, but the campus
was mostly quiet as a
snowstorm blanketed
Washington, D.C.. Apolice
presence was increased
throughout the city.
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