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Oath Keepers’ Stewart Rhodes sentenced to 18 years in Jan. 6 attack

VIDEO | 01:29
Oath Keepers’ Stewart Rhodes sentenced to 18 years in Jan. 6 attack

Oath Keepers founder Stewart Rhodes is sentenced after a landmark verdict convicting him of seditious conspiracy in leading a plot to keep then-President Trump in power.

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Oath Keepers founder Stewart Rhodes was sentenced Thursday to 18 years in prison after a landmark verdict convicting him of spearheading a weeks-long plot to keep former President Trump in power, which culminated in the Jan. 6, 2021, insurrection at the U.S. Capitol.

Rhodes was sentenced in a federal courthouse in Washington that sits less than a mile from the Capitol. He is the first Jan. 6 defendant convicted of seditious conspiracy to receive his punishment, which will set the standard for sentencings to come of members of far-right extremist groups.

Prosecutors, who sought a 25-year sentence, said Rhodes remained a threat to American democracy more than two years after he led a plot to forcibly block the transfer of power from Trump to President Biden after Trump lost the 2020 election.

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During a court hearing Wednesday, police officers and congressional staffers recounted the physical and emotional trauma they are still suffering after they engaged in hand-to-hand combat with rioters for hours or fled as the mob roamed the halls in search of lawmakers and then-Vice President Mike Pence.

Rhodes, of Granbury, Texas, was found guilty in November of seditious conspiracy alongside Florida chapter leader Kelly Meggs. Four other Oath Keepers were convicted of the rarely used charge during a second trial in January. Three of Rhodes’ co-defendants were acquitted of seditious conspiracy but convicted of other crimes.

It was one of the most consequential cases brought by the Justice Department as it has sought to prove that the riot was not a spur-of-the-moment protest for right-wing extremists like the Oath Keepers but the culmination of weeks of plotting to overturn Biden’s election victory.

The founder of the militia group Oath Keepers, Stewart Rhodes, was once a promising Yale Law School graduate.

Sept. 26, 2022

Rhodes’ sentencing comes just weeks after former Proud Boys national chairman Enrique Tarrio was convicted of seditious conspiracy alongside other leaders of his far-right group for what prosecutors said was a separate plot to block the transfer of presidential power. The Proud Boys members will be sentenced in August and September.

Rhodes’ lawyers said that he should be sentenced to the 16 months he has already served behind bars since his January 2022 arrest. In seeking leniency, Rhodes’ lawyers cited his military service and told the judge that his writings and statements were all “protected political speech.”

Rhodes’ attorneys plan to appeal his conviction.

Rhodes and Meggs were the first people in nearly three decades to be found guilty at trial of seditious conspiracy. Meggs was sentenced to 12 years in prison later Thursday, and two other Oath Keepers will be sentenced Friday. Four other defendants convicted of seditious conspiracy are to be sentenced next week.

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A jury has heard testimony about the Proud Boys leader’s communications with a police officer in the weeks before members of his far-right extremist group stormed the U.S. Capitol.

Feb. 15, 2023

The convictions were a major blow for the Oath Keepers, which Rhodes founded in 2009 and which grew into one of the largest far-right anti-government militia groups.

Recruiting past and present members of the military and police officers, the group promotes the belief that the federal government is out to strip citizens of their civil liberties and paints its followers as defenders against tyranny.

Rhodes and the other Oath Keepers said there was never any plan to attack the Capitol or stop Congress from certifying Biden’s victory.

The defense tried to seize on the fact that none of the Oath Keepers’ messages laid out an explicit plan to storm the Capitol. But prosecutors said the Oath Keepers saw an opportunity to further their goal to stop the transfer of power and sprang into action when the mob began storming the building.

Messages, recordings and other evidence presented at trial showed Rhodes and his followers growing increasingly enraged, after the 2020 election, at the prospect of a Biden presidency, which they viewed as a threat to the country and their way of life. In an encrypted chat two days after the election, Rhodes told his followers to prepare their “mind, body, spirit” for “civil war.”

In a conference call days later, Rhodes urged his followers to let Trump know they were “willing to die” for the country. One Oath Keeper was so alarmed that he began recording the call and contacted the FBI, telling jurors that “it sounded like we were going to war against the United States government.”

Another man testified that after the riot, Rhodes tried to persuade him to pass along a message to Trump that urged the president not to give up his fight to hold on to power. The intermediary — who told jurors he had an indirect way to reach the president — recorded his meeting with Rhodes and went to the FBI instead of giving the message to Trump. Rhodes told the man during that meeting that the Oath Keepers “should have brought rifles” on Jan. 6.

The longest sentence issued before Thursday in the more than 1,000 Capitol riot cases — 14 years in prison — was handed down this month to a man with a long criminal record who attacked police officers with pepper spray and a chair as he stormed the Capitol.

Slightly more than 500 of the defendants have been sentenced, with more than half receiving prison time.

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