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Oakland County judge blocks county prosecutors from enforcing abortion ban

Lansing — Oakland County Circuit Judge James Cunningham issued a temporary restraining order Monday stopping 13 county prosecutors with abortion providers within their jurisdictions from enforcing the state’s abortion ban.

The order was issued in response to a request from Gov. Gretchen Whitmer after the Court of Appeals ruled earlier Monday that county prosecutors were not blocked from enforcing the state’s long-dormant abortion ban by a preliminary injunction issued in the Court of Claims.

In his order, Cunningham said the order was “necessary to prevent the immediate and irreparable injury that will occur if defendants are allowed to prosecute abortion providers under (the 1931 law) without a full resolution of the merits of the pending cases challenging the statute. “

The judge scheduled a Zoom hearing on the matter for Wednesday.

Cunningham’s order came shortly after Whitmer made the request in her lawsuit against 13 county prosecutors with abortion clinics in their counties.

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Manchin-Schumer side agreement would overhaul environmental review

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A side agreement reached between Democratic leadership and Sen. Joe Manchin III (DW.Va.) as part of their broader deal on an economic package would overhaul the nation’s process for approving new energy projects, including by expediting a gas pipeline proposed for West Virginia, according to a one-page summary obtained by The Washington Post.

To win Manchin’s support for the climate, energy and health-care package that was etched last week, Democratic leaders agreed to attempt to advance separate legislation on expediting energy projects. These changes would fall outside the bounds of the Senate budget procedure the party is using to pass its budget bill, making it impossible for Democrats to approve that with just 51 votes. The new agreement would require 60 votes to be approved and would need GOP support to be signed into law. Republicans have supported similar measures in the past, but the agreement could face defections from liberal Democrats, who have warned against making it easier to open new oil and gas projects.

The 100-seat Senate is now evenly split between Democrats and Republicans, but Vice President Harris can cast a tiebreaking vote.

The two-week scramble that saved Democrats’ climate agenda

The side deal would set new two-year limits, or maximum timelines, for environmental reviews for “major” projects, the summary says. It would also aim to streamline the government processes for deciding approvals for energy projects by centralizing decision-making with one lead agency, the summary adds. The bill would also attempt to clear the way for the approval of the Mountain Valley Pipeline, which would transport Appalachian shale gas about 300 miles from West Virginia to Virginia. This pipeline is a key priority of Manchin’s.

Other provisions would limit legal challenges to energy projects and give the Energy Department more authority to approve electric transmission lines that are deemed to be “in the national interest,” according to the document.

“This is a pretty vague outline, but if you had this kind of efficient streamlining it could lead to the necessary build-out of energy infrastructure not just for fossil fuels but for all types of energy that are necessary for reliability and decarbonization,” he said Neil Chatterjee, former commissioner and chairman of the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission.

How the Schumer-Manchin climate deal might impact you and change the US

Still, the agreement poses new challenges for Democratic lawmakers who are weighing these permitting changes as the necessary price to pay to secure Manchin’s support for hundreds of billions in new clean energy investments. Climate groups have largely said that trade is worth while, because Manchin’s vote on the broader package will unlock long-sought subsidies and tax credits for solar, wind and other forms of renewable energy.

Many Democrats have been wary. Sen. Jeff Merkley (D-Ore.) said previously: “I really want to see all the details on the permitting. We all knew that any deal that would be struck between Schumer and Manchin would have a lot of fossil fuels in it. The question is on balance.”

Still, the agreement appears to have been the only way to secure Manchin’s vote for the broader climate deal. Manchin had voiced concerns about approving hundreds of billions of dollars in government subsidies for fossil fuel projects that could be defeated by red tape or climate lawsuits, and said the United States must do much more to avoid its dependence on authoritarian petrostates.

In both public and private talks, Manchin has made it clear that he views approving the Mountain Valley Pipeline as a top priority. Supporters have characterized it as a way to help make the United States an exporter of liquefied natural gas, which the United States is sending to help Europe amid the war in Ukraine.

Climate groups have opposed the project, with a 2017 analysis by Oil Change International, an advocacy group, finding that the greenhouse gas emissions from the Mountain Valley Pipeline would approximate 26 coal plants or 19 million passenger cars.

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Woman charged in crash that killed two cyclists; victims ID’d

RONALD TOWNSHIP, Mich. (WOOD) — A woman was rooted Monday in connection to a crash that killed two cyclists participating in a Make-A-Wish bicycle ride and injured three.

The Ionia County Sheriff’s Office has identified the two cyclists who died as Edward Erickson, a 48-year-old from Ann Arbor, and Michael Salhaney, a 57-year-old from Bloomfield Hills.

An undated booking photo of Mandy Marie Benn. (Courtesy Ionia County Sheriff’s Office)

Mandy Marie Benn, a 42-year-old from Ionia, has been charged with two counts of operating while intoxicated causing death/operating a vehicle while under the influence of a controlled substance, a 15-year felony; one count of operating while intoxicated/operating a vehicle while under the influence of a controlled substance, a 93-day misdemeanor; second offense notice operating while intoxicated, a 1-year misdemeanor, the Ionia County Sheriff’s Office said in a release.

Benn, who appeared visibly distraught as she was arraigned by video from the Ionia County jail, has pleaded not guilty.

the crash happened on saturday around 11:15 a.m. in the 3000 block of Stage Road in Ronald Township. Benn was driving northbound behind a UPS truck, the sheriff’s office said. It said when the UPS truck started slowing down to stop, Benn passed it in the southbound lane, driving into the path of the bicyclists.

Deputies say it appears Benn did not see the bicyclists before she hit them. They say it happened on a straight road with nothing obstructing the line of vision.

During the arraignment on Monday, the prosecutor said she appeared to be under the influence of prescription drugs at the time of the crash and did not have any alcohol in her system.

The cyclists were participating in a bicycle tour with Make-A-Wish, called Wish-A-Mile.

The sheriff’s office on Monday said one of the cyclists who was injured is in serious but stable condition and is expected to recover, while the other two have been treated and released.

Another cyclist participating in the fundraiser, David Contorer, said he was five miles behind those involved in the crash.

“What I saw and heard were loud sirens and Michigan State Police Troopers hauling by us at a very fast clip and we knew something was wrong,” Contorer said.

News of what happened sent shockwaves through the group of cyclists.

“All our heartbeats were going very fast,” Contorer said. “It was very scary, because you’re vulnerable when you’re on a bike and of course we knew someone from our group had been fatally injured and others seriously injured.”

Benn is being held on a $1,000,000 cash/surety bond. Her de ella probably cause a conference has been scheduled for Aug. 8 and her preliminary hearing has been scheduled for Aug. 15.

— News 8’s Jacqueline Francis contributed to this report.

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Wyoming voters tell CNN ‘hell no,’ ‘absolutely not’ when asked if they will support Liz Cheney

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Rep. Liz Cheney, R-Wyo., took heat from Wyoming voters during a Friday segment of CNN’s “Anderson Cooper 360” when asked about their support for the current congresswoman and the proposition of awarding her a fourth term in office.

“Hell no!” said one self-described Trump supporter, who later went on to defend her response to her by claiming that Cheney did both her constituent of her and the former president “dirty” through her outspoken role of her with the Jan. 6 House committee.

“She’s done us dirty… look at how she’s done Trump. I’m a Trump fan,” she said, adding,”she’s supposed to be supporting him. She’s a Republican, for crying out loud.”

Another voter told correspondent Randi Kaye “absolutely not,” when asked if Cheney could expect to receive his vote, and a third voter said she believed Cheney had already had “three [terms] too many.”

NEW POLL: LIZ CHENEY TRAILING TRUMP-BACKED PRIMARY CHALLENGER BY MORE THAN 20 POINTS

Rep. Liz Cheney speaks during a press conference on Capitol Hill, Oct. 22, 2019.

Rep. Liz Cheney speaks during a press conference on Capitol Hill, Oct. 22, 2019.
(Saul Loeb/AFP via Getty Images)

Other voters voiced their disdain with the anti-Trump Republican, also citing her role on the Jan. 6 committee as a major reason.

Kaye noted The Equality State’s overwhelming support for the former president, pointing to the nearly 70 percent of votes he reeled in during the 2020 election, and acknowledged how Cheney’s opposing stance could signal her downfall.

LAURA INGRAHAM: LIZ CHENEY IS ‘SMEARING’ ALL TRUMP VOTERS

Stephen Ayres and Jason Van Tatenhove, an ally of Oath Keepers leader Stewart Rhodes, are sworn in by the House committee investigating the Jan. 6 attack on the US Capitol, July 12, 2022.

Stephen Ayres and Jason Van Tatenhove, an ally of Oath Keepers leader Stewart Rhodes, are sworn in by the House committee investigating the Jan. 6 attack on the US Capitol, July 12, 2022.
(Demetrius Freeman/The Washington Post via Getty Images/Pool)

“I find her work on the Jan. 6 committee just repulsive,” another voter told Kaye. Others who responded to Kaye’s questions railed against the committee as a “witch hunt,” a “kangaroo court,” a “hoax,” and “propaganda.”

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One constituent went on to criticize Cheney and the committee as a whole for not allowing former President Trump to have a defense team present to push back against the committee’s claims about his alleged misconduct concerning the 2021 Capitol riot, when a mob of his supporters stormed the building and disrupted certification of the Electoral College count.

“That ain’t the rule of law,” he said, also condemning Cheney’s role in calling out the former president as well by saying ,”That’s not the Wyoming way.”

Cheney will face off against Trump-backed Republican Harriet Hageman in a primary this month. Cheney is seeking a fourth term representing the at-large congressional district of Wyoming, which has only one House seat due to its low population. Cheney won a third term in 2020 by 44 points in the deep-red state.

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Trump beats Biden, Harris in hypothetical 2024 match-up: poll

Former President Trump leads President Biden and Vice President Harris in hypothetical 2024 presidential match-ups, according to a new Harvard CAPS-Harris Poll survey released exclusively to The Hill on Monday.

The poll found that if the 2024 election were held today, 45 percent of respondents would vote for Trump in a race against Biden, who attracted the support of 41 percent of respondents, while 14 percent were unsure or didn’t know.

In a hypothetical Trump-Harris match-up, Trump’s lead expands to 7 percentage points. Forty-seven percent said they would support Trump, compared to 40 percent for Harris and 13 percent who were unsure or didn’t know.

Mark Penn, the co-director of the Harvard CAPS-Harris Poll survey, noted how Biden would be a weaker candidate in a race against Trump today than he performed in 2020.

“Biden is a very weak Democratic nominee and would lose even the popular vote in a rematch today,” Penn said. “Trump is far from 50 percent support, and there is a high undecided vote despite everyone knowing the candidates, because the public wants new over more of the same.”

The poll comes as Biden’s approval rating remains at roughly the lowest point in his presidency. The poll found his approval rating of him clocked in at 38 percent, which was unchanged from when the pollsters asked the question a month ago.

Biden and White House officials have repeatedly said the president intends to run in 2024 if his health allows.

Trump, meanwhile, has tipped closer to another White House bid, but some Republican lawmakers have publicly suggested Trump should wait to announce until after the midterm elections to avoid shifting the focus away from inflation when voters head to the ballot box in November.

The two presidents’ and Harris’s favorability ratings, however, all remain underwater.

Thirty-seven percent of those surveyed said they had a favorable view of Biden, compared to 44 percent for Trump. Just thirty-six percent of voters said they had a favorable view of Harris.

A majority of respondents indicated they did not want Trump nor Biden to run in 2024.

Nearly 7 in 10 respondents — 69 percent — said Biden should not run for a second term, while 59 percent of respondents said Trump shouldn’t run.

The poll was conducted online on July 27-28 among 1,885 registered voters in a collaboration between the Center for American Political Studies at Harvard University and the Harris Poll.

The survey is weighted to reflect known demographics, and as a representative online sample, it does not report a probability confidence interval.

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Fake federal agent who duped Secret Service pleads guilty

One of two men accused of impersonating federal law enforcement officials in a scheme that duped Secret Service agents and others pleaded guilty Monday to multiple charges in Washington, DC

Arian Taherzadeh’s plea came nearly four months after his arrest with a second man, Haider Ali, exposed allegations that they compromised Secret Service agents with access to the White House — including at least one assigned to protect first lady Jill Biden.

It also revealed a cache of weapons and police equipment at apartments the two Washington men maintained.

In addition to federal conspiracy, Taherzadeh, 40, as part of his plea, also admitted guilt to two District of Columbia offenses: unlawful possession of a large-capacity ammunition-feeding device and voyeurism.

The latter charge relates to his unauthorized videotaping of women having sex in apartments he leased and rigged with surveillance cameras.

Taherzadeh’s sentencing date has not been scheduled. He faces a maximum sentence of five years in prison, but federal sentencing guidelines stipulated in his plea agreement suggest he receive a prison term of between 37 months and 46 months.

As part of his plea agreement, Taherzadeh agreed to cooperate with federal authorities in their ongoing investigation. He remains free, but cannot leave his home, with few exceptions, as a condition of his court-ordered release of him after his arrest of him.

Prosecutors said he concocted his elaborate series of fake claims of being a federal agent to obtain multiple apartments for which he failed to pay rent, to promote his own security company and to ingratiate himself with current federal officers.

Ali, 36, has pleaded not guilty to charges of false impersonation of a federal officer, and to unlawful possession of a large-capacity ammunition-feeding device in the case, which is pending in US District Court in Washington. Ali is also under effective house arrest.

Prosecutors said that a third person, who was not identified in court filings, participated in the scheme.

Taherzadeh in 2018 created a purported private investigative agency called the United States Special Police, which despite its name was not associated in any way with the US government, prosecutors said.

From late 2018 through April, Taherzadeh falsely claimed to be a special agent with the Homeland Security Department, a member of a federal task force, a former US Air Marshal, and an ex-Army Ranger, according to court filings.

He used those claims to cozy up to Secret Service agents, some of whom he gave gifts, which included a generator and a “doomsday” backpack to one agent, and the use of two rent-free apartments for about a year to two other agents , prosecutors said.

In all, the gifts to members of the Secret Service were worth more than $90,000, prosecutors said.

Taherzadeh’s company obtained leases for multiple apartments in three residential complexes in Washington, but did not pay rent, parking fees and other costs, leading to more than $800,000 in losses to the complexes’ owners, filings say.

And “Taherzadeh installed surveillance cameras outside and inside his apartment in one of the complexes,” the US Justice Department said in a press release.

“Among other places, he installed, maintained, and utilized cameras in his bedroom. He used these cameras to record women engaged in sexual activity. Taherzadeh then showed these explicit videos to third parties,” according to the release.

Four members of the Secret Service were placed on administrative leave pending further investigation after the arrest of Taherzadeh and Ali.

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Joshua Brandon Crane’s body was found along the American River after he attempted to rescue two rafters in distress.


The American River just outside of Sacramento, Calif.

The American River just outside of Sacramento, Calif.

David Rout/Getty Images

A Sacramento man who attempted to save two rafters was found dead along the American River, the Sacramento Bee reported.

The outlet says that 30-year-old Joshua Brandon Crane went missing Friday, July 26 after jumping into the American River to save two struggling rafters. Though the two of them eventually made it to safety, it wasn’t until Saturday that Crane’s body was recovered downstream from the San Juan rapids – a popular recreational area in Fair Oaks, California. The Bee says that Crane wasn’t wearing a life jacket at the time of the incident.

It’s unknown whether the two rafters were wearing a life jacket. Crane’s official cause of death is still being determined.


Sacramento County’s Regional Parks website says that even strong, skilled swimmers should put on life jackets while visiting local rivers, lakes and waterways. People are advised to wear them while boating, swimming, or even just wading. If someone is in distress, they’re advised to yell for help while another person reaches toward them with a tree branch, boat paddle or pole. Bystanders can also toss a life jacket or ice chest to the distressed person to help keep them afloat while help arrives. Currently, there are eight life vest stations along the American River Parkway that loan vests to both children and adults.

The Sacramento Police Department did not respond to SFGATE’s request for comment at the time this article was written.

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Guy Refitt, Texas man who brought gun to Capitol on Jan. 6, sentenced to 87 months in prison

Washington— A federal judge on Monday sentenced Guy Reffitt, the Texas man convicted of bringing a handgun to the Capitol during the Jan. 6 attack, to 87 months in prison, the longest sentence so far related to the 2021 assault.

A member of the far-right militia group the Texas Three Percenters, Reffitt was the first defendant to stand trial on charges stemming from the attack. He was found guilty in March of five criminal counts, including obstructing Congress’ certification of President Biden’s Electoral College win.

The 7.25-year sentence was far shorter than the 15 years sought by prosecutors, who argued that the punishment should be more severe since Reffitt’s actions amounted to terrorism. At a sentencing hearing on Monday in federal court in Washington, DC, Judge Dabney Friedrich disagreed, citing another Jan. 6 cases in which prosecutors did not seek such an enhancement.

Still, the sentence is the lengthiest handed down for a Jan. 6 defendant to date. Two other defendants received sentences of 63 months earlier this year for their roles in the attack. Reffitt’s defense team had urged the judge to sentence him to no more than two years behind bars.

Reffitt will also be on probation for three years upon his release, and must pay a $2,000 fine.

Addressing the court during Monday’s hearing, Reffitt admitted he acted like a “f***ing idiot” on Jan. 6 and said he regretted his actions, apologizing to Congress and the officers he encountered that day.

pxl-20220801-201324674-2.jpg
Guy Refitt addresses a federal judge in Washington, DC, on Monday, August 1, 2022, ahead of his sentencing for his role in the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol.

William J. Hennessy, Jr.


“I was a little too crazy,” he said to a skeptical Friedrich. “I was not thinking clearly.”

The judge said it was difficult not to see the apology as anything but “halfhearted,” particularly given some conspiratorial statements he has made about the events of Jan. 6 since his arrest.

“What he and others who attacked the Capitol on Jan. 6 did is the antithesis of patriotism,” the judge said before handing down the sentence.

In seeking the lengthier sentence, prosecutors said in court filings that Reffitt played a central role as part of the mob on Jan. 6, and intended “to use his gun and police-style flexicuffs to forcibly drag legislators out of the building and take over Congress.”

Assistant US Attorney Jeffrey Nestler told Friedrich that Reffitt “puffed himself up” as the leader of the mob, waving the rest of the rioters on as he confronted police on the Capitol’s west front.

“He didn’t just want President Trump to stay in power,” Nestler said. “He wanted to physically and literally remove Congress.”

The prosecutor alleged that Jan. 6 was “the beginning” for Reffitt. “He wanted the rest of his militia group to start taking over state capitols all around the country,” Nestler said.

Former US Capitol Police Officer Shauni Kerkhoff, who confronted Reffitt outside the Capitol on Jan. 6, implored the judge to sentence Reffitt to the maximum sentence possible under the law.

“His actions weren’t acts of patriotism. They were acts of domestic terrorism,” Kerkhoff said.

Prosecutors said Reffitt also threatened his children when they wanted to report him to authorities.

At his trial, Reffitt’s 19-year-old son Jackson — who turned his father in to law enforcement — told the jury that he had learned of his father’s membership in the mob when he saw his mother and sister watching news coverage of the events that day. jackson described the threat his dad had made against him and his sister, Peyton, when they tried to turn him in: “If you turn me in you’re a traitor, and traitors get shot.”

In court on Monday, prosecutors read a letter from Jackson to the judge, in which he described the “painful, slow story” of his father’s descent into conspiracy theories. He said his father needed mental health care, which Friedrich said she would require as part of the sentence.

During the trial, Reffitt’s attorney at the time called no witnesses, and Reffitt did not testify in his own defense.

F. Clinton Broden, Reffitt’s new attorney, disagreed with prosecutors’ characterization of his client. He argued in written memos and in court that Reffitt never actually entered the Capitol, never removed the handgun from his holster and “never gave any indication he would actually harm his children.”

Peyton, the defendant’s daughter, spoke emotionally in court on Monday in support of her father and explained that his mental health was a real issue.

Wiping away tears, Peyton said, “My father’s name wasn’t on the flags that were there that day, that everyone was carrying. It was another man’s name,” referring to former President Donald Trump, who addressed his throngs of supporters near the White House before they marched on the Capitol.

Friedrich, the judge, appeared most concerned with Reffitt’s mental health and prospects once he is eventually freed, at one point asking, “What is this man going to do after he is released from prison?”

“It’s really disturbing that he repeatedly persists with these views that are way outside the mainstream,” she added, “His claims [about attempts to overthrow the government] are wrong.”

Friedrich also took issue with Reffitt’s violent threats against lawmakers like Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi.

“To this day, he has not disavowed those comments,” she said.

Since Reffitt’s conviction by a 12-person jury, five more defendants have been found guilty by juries. Five others have been convicted by judges at bench trials. One defendant, matthew martinwas acquitted of multiple misdemeanor counts by a judge.

Outside of court on Monday, before the sentence was imposed, Reffitt’s wife Nicole told CBS News she believed prosecutors’ representation of her husband was a “misrepresentation.”

“He’s a good man,” she said.

Cristina Corujo contributed to this report.

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Guy Refitt: Jan 6. rioter who carried gun to US Capitol and threatened Nancy Pelosi gets more than 7 years in prison

Reffitt, a recruiter for a right-wing militia known as the Three Percenters, was the first Capitol rioter to go to trial rather than take a plea agreement.

“Mr. Reffitt’s reluctance to admit early that his behavior is illegal is concerning,” District Judge Dabney Friedrich said before handing down the 87-month sentence. “And I want to be very clear… under no legitimate definition of the term ‘patriot’ (does) Mr. Reffitt’s behavior on and around January 6 fit the term. It is the antithesis of the word.”

Friedrich added: “The officers at the Capitol are the patriots, as well as those who fought and even died to protect our democracy, our rule of law… those in the mob are not. Not only are they not patriots, they’ re a direct threat to our democracy and will be punished as such.”

Reffitt was convicted by a DC jury in March and convicted earlier this year of five felonies, including transporting and carrying a firearm on Capitol grounds, interfering with Capitol Police and obstructing an official proceeding. He had driven to DC with several firearms, one of which he carried with him on the steps of the Capitol during the early hours of the riot.

“I just want to see Pelosi’s head hit every f**king stair on the way out. … And (Republican leader) Mitch McConnell too,” Reffitt said, according to a video recording he made of himself on January 6.

The hefty sentence, paired with the fact that every January 6 defendant to face a jury has been convicted, could determine some of the hundreds of January 6 defendants awaiting trial to instead take plea deals offered by the Justice Department.

The 87-month sentence is two years longer than any other Capitol riot prison term handed down so far.

Reffitt’s wife and two daughters were in the courtroom when the sentence was handed down. Reffitt’s younger daughter, Peyton, told the judge that her father was “not a threat to my family,” and that her family “turned a blind eye” to his mental health issues.

“My father’s name wasn’t on all the flags that were there that day, that everyone was carrying that day. He is not the leader,” Peyton said through tears, at times pausing with her hand on her heart.

The mother of Ashli ​​Babbitt, the pro-Trump rioter who was shot and killed by police on January 6, was also in the courtroom at times on Monday.

Reffitt’s son Jackson, who testified against his father during the trial, was not in the courtroom. In a statement read aloud by prosecutors, Jackson said that his father “slowly lost himself over the last five years,” but that “whether you view him as a father, a family member or friend, using these labels to justify anything he has done is completely wrong.”

Courtroom sketch during the verdict in the Guy Reffitt Jan 6 trial on March 8, 2022.

Prosecutors had sought a sentence of almost a decade longer than the most severe sentence to date by adding enhanced penalties to his sentence for terrorism. Prosecutor Jeffrey Nestler told the judge that Reffott “wanted to physically and literally remove members of Congress from power” and that the government believes “what he was doing that day was terrorism.”

“We do believe he is a domestic terrorist,” Nestler said Monday.

Friedrich did not add additional penalties for terrorism, however, saying that it would create an “unwarranted disparity” between Reffitt’s sentence and that of other rioters convicted of bringing weapons or threatening lawmakers.

This story is breaking and will be updated.

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1st Capitol rioter to stand trial gets 7 years, the longest sentence for a Jan. 6 defendant so far

A federal judge on Monday sentenced the first Capitol rioter convicted at trial to 87 months, or just over seven years in prison — the longest term of incarceration thus far for a defendant in the Justice Department’s criminal investigation of the Jan. 6 assault on Congress .

Guy Wesley Reffitt, 49, of Wylie, Texas, was convicted by a federal jury in March of five felony counts, including obstruction of justice as well as entering and remaining in a restricted building or grounds with a firearm.

Federal prosecutors with the US Department of Justice had asked that Reffitt be sentenced to 15 years in prison. Prosecutors had also — for the first time — asked a federal district court judge to apply a terrorism enhancement, which would effectively define under law that a rioter’s actions amounted to domestic terrorism.

“We do believe that what he was doing that day was domestic terrorism and we do believe that he’s a domestic terrorist,” Assistant US Attorney Jeffrey Nestler said Monday.

But the judge overseeing Reffitt’s case, Dabney Friedrich, turned down the request, saying that there have been multiple other defendants since the Jan. 6 attack where DOJ chose not to pursue the terrorism enhancement, despite their conduct appearing to be much more serious and threatening. than what Reffitt was convicted of at trial.

Reffitt’s attorney, Clinton Broden, argued the DOJ was unfairly seeking to make an example of Reffitt simply because he took his case to trial.

“This is the only case where the government has asked for the terrorism enhancement, and this is the only case where the defendant has gone to trial,” Broden said. “I don’t think it takes a rocket scientist to figure that out.”

Reffitt is among the more than 850 people who have been charged in connection with the deadly breach of the Capitol building on Jan. 6, 2021, which disrupted a joint session of Congress agreed to ascertain and count the electoral votes related to the 2020 presidential election . Over 200 defendants have already pleaded guilty to a variety of misdemeanors and felony charges, with some being sentenced to years in federal prison.

Reffitt’s attorney, Clinton Broden, asked that his client be sentenced to no more than two years. He said he was shocked by the prosecution’s recommendation, since his client was not accused of entering the Capitol or assaulting any police officers that day.

“It’s absolutely absurd,” Broden told The Associated Press during a telephone interview last month. “I certainly don’t condone what Mr. Reffitt did. And I think everybody realizes the seriousness of the offenses. But at the same point, there has to be some proportionality here.”

Federal sentencing guidelines in Reffitt’s case called for a prison sentence ranging from nine years to 11 years and three months.

During the trial, prosecutors sought to cast Reffitt, a member of the Texas Three Percenters militia group, as a ringleader of one of the first waves of the mob that breached the Capitol from the building’s west side.

Videos played in court showed Reffitt climbing a stone banister near where scaffolding had been put up in advance of President Joe Biden’s inauguration, and Reffitt confronting US Capitol Police officers who warned him to back down before they fired less-than-lethal ammunition and pepper spray to stop his advance. Other videos presented in court showed Reffitt gesturing to the crowd behind him in what appeared to be an attempt to get them to move up the stairs toward multiple entryways that lead into the building.

At one point in the trial, prosecutors played first-person footage that Reffitt had recorded with a 360-degree camera mounted on his helmet while in the crowd at the “Save America” ​​rally prior to the attack.

“We’re taking the Capitol before the day is out,” Reffitt says in the video. “Everybody is in the same harmony on that… dragging ’em out kicking and f***ing screaming.”

“I didn’t come here to play games… I just want to see Pelosi’s head hit every f***ing stair on the way out,” he says later. “I think we have the numbers to make it happen… without firing a single shot.”

The Justice Department’s case also relied on two key witnesses: Rocky Hardie, a former member of the Texas Three Percenters, who testified against Reffitt in exchange for immunity to cooperate, and Reffitt’s 19-year-old son, Jackson, who submitted an online tip to the FBI first alerting them to his father’s plans weeks before the riot, ultimately leading to Reffitt’s arrest on Jan. 16, 2021.

During an interview with ABC News from jail last December, Reffitt said he “never expected anything like this to happen.”

“This has been disastrous for me and my family, especially for my girls, my son — actually, all of my family,” Reffitt told ABC News