From the BBC:
“Oath Keepers: Two members of
far-right militia guilty of US sedition”
The leader of a far-right militia
has been found guilty of plotting to stop US President Joe Biden from taking
office after the 2020 election. A jury found Oath Keepers founder Stewart
Rhodes guilty of the rare charge of seditious conspiracy following a two-month
trial. He plotted an armed rebellion to stop the transfer of power from Donald
Trump to Mr Biden, prosecutors said. Four more were on trial with him related
to the 2021 Capitol riots. Three of the group - Jessica Watkins, Kelly Meggs
and Kenneth Harrelson - went inside the building during the attack. Meggs was
also found guilty of seditious conspiracy on Tuesday. Both Rhodes and Meggs now
face a maximum 20 year sentence on the charges. Harrelson, Watkins and a fifth
member, Thomas Caldwell - were found not guilty of seditious conspiracy. All
five of the group members were found guilty of obstruction of an official
proceeding. Rhodes, who prosecutors say acted as a "battlefield
general" during the riots, was also found guilty of tampering with
documents or proceedings. He was acquitted of two other conspiracy counts. Supporters
of then-President Trump, a Republican, stormed Congress on 6 January 2021 in a
bid to thwart certification of Joe Biden's White House election victory.
So far around 900 people in
nearly all 50 states have been arrested for taking part in the riot. The
verdict comes after three full days of jury deliberation. The panel in
Washington DC met once before taking a weekend break for the Thanksgiving
holiday, before meeting for two more days this week. Speaking outside the
courthouse following the verdict, lawyers for Rhodes said they were not pleased
with the outcome, but that it isn't a clear-cut victory for the prosecution
either. "It's a mixed bag," said lawyer Edward Tarpley, adding he is
grateful the jury found the defendants not guilty on some counts.
This was the first conviction of
seditious conspiracy since 1995, when 10 Islamist militants were convicted for
trying to plant bombs at New York City landmarks. The Civil War-era charge was
first enacted to stop residents of southern states from fighting against the US
government. In order to be convicted of seditious conspiracy, prosecutors must
prove that two or more people conspired to "overthrow, put down or to
destroy by force" the US government, or that they planned to use force to
oppose US authority. Alan Rozenshtein, a law professor at the University of
Minnesota and a former US Department of Justice lawyer, said the conviction of
Rhodes is significant because it shows that a seditious conspiracy charge is
"a viable and legal path for punishing the most serious anti-democratic
conduct" in the country. He added the mixed verdict proves that juries are
able to apply the conviction responsibly. The verdict is also a confidence
boost for the justice department, Mr Rozenshtein said, in their quest to
prosecute more people in relation to the Capitol riots. Officials argued that
Rhodes stashed dozens of weapons in a hotel room in Virginia, just across the
Potomac River from Washington DC, and planned to bring them into the city in
the event of mass civil disorder. During the trial, defence lawyers said that
the fact the weapons were never used - or even brought into the city -
bolstered their argument that the Oath Keepers were on a purely defensive
mission, intending to protect protesters and keep the peace inside and outside
the Capitol. Among the defendants, two are from Florida, one is from Ohio and
one is from Virginia. Rhodes, the accused ringleader, is from Texas. The
attackers, as well as more than a dozen other members of the group, were found
guilty of seditious conspiracy. The Oath Keepers were founded by Rhodes, a
former US Army paratrooper and Yale-educated lawyer, and has sought to attract
to current and former members of the US military and law enforcement. Over the
past decade, members have shown up at a number of protests and armed standoffs
across the country. More Oath Keepers members, along with members of another
far-right group, the Proud Boys, will go on trial on seditious conspiracy
charges later this year.
^ This is a great step for the
United States to start to put aside the Attempted Coup by these Domestic
Terrorists. ^
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