False claims by DONALD JOHN TRUMP caused his supporters to attack our United States Capitol. I was proud to work for three U.S. Senators while I was a student at Georgetown Univeersity. Thus, I spent a lot of time in our Capitol, 1974-77. The sight of our Capitol being desecrated by insurrectionists offends all true patriots. From The New York Times:
First Jan. 6 Rioter to Enter Capitol Gets More Than 4 Years in Prison
Michael Sparks, 47, was the first rioter to breach the Capitol and among the first to be confronted by the U.S. Capitol Police Officer Eugene Goodman.
The first rioter to breach the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, was sentenced Tuesday to more than four years in prison, federal prosecutors announced.
In March, a federal jury found Michael Sparks, 47, of Elizabethtown, Ky., guilty on felony charges of obstructing an official proceeding and civil disorder and several misdemeanor charges for being on the premises of the Capitol building on Jan. 6.
On Tuesday, Judge Timothy J. Kelly of U.S. District Court in Washington sentenced him to 53 months in prison and ordered him to pay a $2,000 fine. Mr. Sparks will be on supervised release for three years after his prison term ends, prosecutors said.
Video footage presented in court showed that Mr. Sparks entering the Capitol building at 2:13 p.m. on Jan. 6 through a window near a door leading into the Senate Wing that rioters had smashed with a police shield.
Mr. Sparks was among the initial group of rioters who were confronted by Eugene Goodman, a Capitol Police officer, who helped hold off the mob from reaching members of Congress.
The rioters chased Mr. Goodman up a flight of stairs as they demanded to know where Congress was certifying the results of the election, prosecutors said.
At the top of the stairs, Mr. Goodman and other officers faced off with the agitated mob, prosecutors said, including Mr. Sparks, who yelled “This is our America!,” at the police officers.
In court, Mr. Sparks’s lawyer, Scott T. Wendelsdorf, argued at sentencing that the focus on his client’s status as the first to enter the Capitol was misplaced and that what really mattered was “how long he was there and what he did while inside.”
In a sentencing memo asking the judge for a sentence of one year under house arrest followed by three years of supervised release, Mr. Wendelsdorf tried to draw a distinction between his client’s actions and the violent actions of other rioters. Mr. Wendelsdorf noted that Mr. Sparks never assaulted or threatened an officer and that he left the Capitol building 20 minutes after he entered.
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1 comment:
They blame everyone else.
These people are mentally disordered
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