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Capitol rioter Guy Reffitt gets longest Jan. 6 sentence, but no terrorism enhancement

WASHINGTON — A Donald Trump fan from Texas who attempted to storm the US Capitol while armed with a gun was sentenced to more than 7 years in prison on Monday after a judge denied the Justice Department’s request for a “terrorism enhancement” that would have resulted in a lengthier prison sentence.

Guy Reffitt was the first Jan. 6 defendant to go to trial. Reffitt’s own son actually tipped off the FBI a couple of weeks before Jan. 6 but didn’t hear back until after the attack. The government had an enormous amount of evidence against Reffitt, including his friend’s testimony that Reffitt was carrying zip ties and that the duo had made a decision to carry guns because they’d rather be “tried by a jury of twelve than carried by six. “

Reffitt was convicted on five counts in March, including transport of a firearm in support of civil disorder and obstruction of an official proceeding, although he did not make it inside the Capitol or use physical violence because he was eventually incapacitated after charging the police line.

In court Monday, Reffitt described himself as “af**king idiot” and was “not thinking clearly” when he tried to storm the US Capitol.

“I clearly f**ked up,” Reffitt said.

“I did want to definitely make an apology, multiple apologies really, and accept my responsibility because I do hate what I did,” he said.

Reffitt, who was a member of the Texas III%ers, told the judge that he no longer want to associate with militia groups or “or any stupid s**t like that.”

Judge Dabney L. Friedrich, a Trump appointee and a former member of the US Sentencing Commission, said that giving Reffitt a sentencing enhancement for carrying a gun during the commission of a crime and for committing a crime of domestic terrorism would create a sentencing disparity with other Jan. 6 defendants.

“There are a lot of cases where defendants committed very violent assaults and even possessed weapons… that did not receive this departure,” Freidrich said.

Prosecutors had argued that the upward departure for terrorism was warranted because Reffitt was “planning to overtake our government.”

“He wasn’t done,” Assistant US Attorney Jeffrey Nestler said. “January 6 was the preface.”

“We do believe that what he was doing that day was terrorism, we do believe he is a domestic terrorist,” Nestler continued.

Reffitt wore a camera on his body that recorded his violent rhetoric during the Trump rally that preceded the riot.

Defender Guy Reffitt at the Capitol.
Guy Reffitt at the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021.US District Court for DC

“I’m taking the Capitol with everybody f**king else,” Guy Reffitt said in his own recording, as “Tiny Dancer” played at Trump’s Jan. 6 rally. “We’re all going to drag them motherf**kers out kicking and screaming, I don’t give as**t. I just want to see Pelosi’s head hit every f**king stair on the way out, and Mitch McConnell too, f**k ’em all… It’s time to take our country back… I think we have the numbers to make it happen.”

He also recorded a Zoom meeting on his computer where he talked extensively about his actions on Jan. 6.

Nestler argued that Reffitt “is in a class all by himself,” but Freidrich said she was “not so sure I agree with the government on that” given how many other Jan. 6 defendants said similar things.

“This defendant has some frightening claims that border on delusional, and they are extraordinarily concerning for the court,” Freidrich said. “But other defendants did too. That’s the point I’m trying to make.”

Under Friedrich’s rulings, without the sentencing enhancements, Reffitt’s sentence guidelines were 87 to 108 months in federal prison.

Prosecutors argued during his trial in March that Reffitt “lit the match“ on the west side of the Capitol on Jan. 6, leading the mob up towards the Capitol building where rioters broke in.

“He was ecstatic about what he did, about what the mob did,” a federal prosecutor told jurors. “Back home in Texas, I thought I’ve gotten away with it.”

In court on Monday, Assistant US Attorney Risa Berkower read a brief letter from Reffitt’s son Jackson Reffitt, who testified against his father. He wanted mental health treatment to be part of his father’s sentence from him.

“My father has lost himself to countless things,” Jackson Reffitt wrote. “The prison system should be used not to destroy a person, but to rehabilitate one.”

Former US Capitol Police Officer Shauni Kerkhoff also delivered a victim impact statement, asking for the maximum sentence for Reffitt because of his lack of remorse, his pride in his actions and the turmoil he caused.

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

Peyton Reffitt, one of Guy Reffitt’s daughters, said her father was not a threat and that his mental health was “a real issue.” She had a hard time making it through some of her statement because she was overcome with emotion, and her father was visibly crying.

Reffitt’s daughter had previously written a letter to the judge that it was “enormously embarrassing” that her father — like a lot of “middle-aged white men” — was sucked in by Trump and that her dad “fell to his knees when President Trump spoke.”

“President Trump deceived my father and many other normal citizens with families to believe that this past election was fraudulent,” the 18-year-old wrote in her letter.

She argued Monday that her father did not play a leadership role on Jan. 6.

“My father’s name wasn’t on all the flags that were there that day, that everyone was carrying,” she said in court. “It was another man’s name.”

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After Days of Punishing Heat, the Pacific Northwest Is Expected to Cool

After getting pummeled by multiple consecutive days of 90 degrees or higher that had climbed into the triple digits in some cities, the Pacific Northwest is expected to gain some relief this week before temperatures rise again this weekend, forecasters said.

In Portland, Ore., a heat wave has lasted for a week, with a record high for the day set on July 26 at 102 degrees, said Lisa Kriederman, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service in Portland.

Sunday was the seventh consecutive day in Portland in which temperatures reached 95 degrees or higher, breaking the previous record of six days in a row. Temperatures have been 90 or greater for eight days in a row, still below the record of 10 days set in 2009.

Temperatures in Portland have also not yet reached the record set last summer of 116 degrees, but this recent heat wave has lasted longer. Cool air from the coast is keeping the moisture levels higher, causing temperatures not to rise as much. That is compared with last year when the air was coming to Portland from the drier Central Oregon area, Ms. Kriederman said.

“This one isn’t getting as hot but the above-average temperatures are lasting longer,” she said.

The area is expected to cool down through Thursday, and then warm up again on Friday and through the weekend, Ms. Kriederman said. The high temperature is expected to be 87 degrees on Tuesday, 86 on Wednesday, 78 on Thursday, and 83 on Friday, according to the National Weather Service.

Last month was the fourth-warmest July on record in Portland at 73.7 degrees, measured by average temperature. The average maximum high was 85.7 and the average minimum temperature was 61.8, which was the highest on record, Ms. Kriederman said.

The Multnomah County Medical Examiner said on Sunday that it was investigating two additional deaths suspected to be associated with the heat wave, bringing the total number of heat-related deaths to five. The Clackamas County Medical Examiner’s Office said on Saturday that it was investigating the death of an older man that was potentially linked to the heat.

About 200 miles east of Portland, in Pendleton, Ore., the temperature reached 111 degrees on Friday, said Larry Nierenberg, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service in Pendleton. Through Sunday, Pendleton recorded seven days of temperatures at or above 100 degrees, he said.

Smoke from the McKinney fire in Northern California caused temperatures in Pendleton to drop from 110 degrees on Saturday to 101 on Sunday. Smoke from wildfires acts like clouds, preventing the sun from coming through for a few hours, Mr. Nierenberg said.

The cities of Kennewick, Pasco, Richland and West Richland in southeast Washington had similar patterns, with a high of 112 on Friday. Temperatures have reached 100 or more on eight consecutive days. This area remained under an excessive heat warning as of Monday afternoon.

During the past week, Pendleton and southeastern Washington as a whole were about 10 to 20 degrees above the normal average, which is in the low 90s for Pendleton and slightly higher in the cities, Mr. Nierenberg said.

In eastern Washington and the Idaho Panhandle, average temperatures in July were not record-setting, said Daniel Butler, a National Weather Service meteorologist in Spokane, Wash.

But there were four days in a row where the maximum temperature reached or exceeded 100 degrees in Spokane, he said. The record for consecutive days of temperatures of 100 degrees or more — six — was set in 1928.

While the recent heat wave has not brought the hottest days on record, the heat has lasted longer, Mr. Butler said.

“It’s been pretty impressive — the longevity of this event,” he said.

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Make-A-Wish ‘heartbroken’ after 2 cyclists killed during 300-mile ride in Michigan

IONIA COUNTY, MI – Those in the Make-A-Wish and bicycling communities are grieving the loses of two men killed over the weekend while riding in the 35th Annual Wish-A-Mile Bicycle Tour.

Names of the cyclists killed in the Saturday, July 30 crash are expected to be officially released sometime Monday, Aug. 1, according to the Ionia County Sheriff’s Office. Police said the driver’s identity will be released after arraignment in court, which is scheduled for Monday afternoon.

“Our staff and the entire Make-A-Wish family are heartbroken and offer our deepest sympathy for the riders involved, their loved ones, and all members of the WAM community during this difficult time,” Make-A-Wish Michigan said in a statement.

RELATED: Two dead, several injured after SUV crashes into Make-A-Wish bike tour

Police agencies responded to an 11:15 am report July 30 about a vehicle that drove into a group of bicyclists on Stage Road in Ionia County’s Ronald Township. Police said an SUV crossed the center line into oncoming traffic while trying to pass another vehicle.

The driver struck five cyclists, killing two and severely injuring three.

The cyclists were participating in the Wish-A-Mile Bicycle tour, the largest Make-A-Wish fundraising event in Michigan, which began in 1987 as a 300-mile trek from Canton to Mackinac.

“We are supporting our riders, staff, and volunteers with grief counseling and assisting with the law enforcement investigation,” Make-A-Wish said in a statement.

To pay respect to the victim’s families, Make-A-Wish canceled its third day of the 300-mile trip on Sunday, July 31.

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Professor who made profanity-laced viral lecture video settles for $95K and withdraws

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Nicolae Miu, of Prior Lake, charged in Apple River stabbings that left Stillwater teen dead, 4 injured

SOMERSET, Wis. — On Monday afternoon, a 52-year-old Minnesota man was charged in the stabbings that happened along the Apple River in Somerset, Wisconsin over the weekend.

Charges filed in St. Croix County against Nicolae Miu, from Prior Lake, include one count of first-degree intentional homicide and four additional counts of attempted first-degree homicide.

The five victims range in age from 17 to 24 and were from Wisconsin and Minnesota. Investigators say that the five victims have sustained stab wounds to their midsections. Two have since been released from the hospital, but one of them died as a result of his injuries.

Authorities said the deceased victim is a 17-year-old boy from Stillwater. A representative from Stillwater High School confirmed Sunday that the victim was a student there.

The St. Croix County Sheriff’s Office says the suspect was tubing along the river with a group when he started stabbing other tubers then took off. It happened near the sunrise bridge in Somerset Saturday afternoon and prompted an hour-and-half long search and evacuation of the river.

apple-river-stabbing-fo-wcco1row-1.jpg

CBS


According to the criminal complaint, the stabbings happened after a confrontation between Miu and a number of others. The complaint lists multiple videos that have been taken into evidence, which show Miu interacting with the group, who can be heard telling him to go away. The video shows Miu appearing to look for something, but the complaint says some of those on the scene believed he was “looking for little girls,” and accused him of being a child molester.

Video shows that Miu, who investigators say had ample time to leave the confrontation, take a knife from his cargo pocket. According to the complaint, the video shows him being slapped and pushed by some of the gathered people. The video also shows him stabbing at some of them, including one person in yellow swim trunks. Another person is seen on the video with a stab wound on the left side of her torso.

The complaint says that Miu’s knife at one point visibly had blood on it, and that there was enough blood in the water to turn it a red tint in some places.

The complaint also includes details from an interview investigators held with Miu. He claimed that he was fearful for her life, and that he was looking for a cell phone that went missing in the water. He said that the knife actually belonged to one of the other people on the scene. He also said he was sorry how the incident “ended up,” and that his whole life was now “down the tubes.”

In Monday’s hearing, Miu’s lawyer said this incident was a “chance encounter.” Miu was described as being an engineer who designs cooling systems.

Miu is being held at the St. Croix County jail. Bail was set at $1 million, which was double the amount requested by prosecutors..

The names of the victims have not yet been released, but one of the victims has posted her story on social media.

Anyone with information, including video, are asked to call Investigator John Shilts at 715-381-4219 or emailing [email protected].

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Three Wayne County deputies shot while serving involuntary commitment papers at Dudley home :: WRAL.com

— Three Wayne County deputies were shot while serving an involuntary commitment warrant in Dudley on Monday morning.

Joel Gillie, the spokesman for Wayne County Sheriff’s Office, said one deputy was at Wayne UNC Health Care while two were flown to ECU Health. The conditions of the deputies were not immediately known.

“Right now, our thoughts and prayers are with the individuals with our department and their families and they deal with their injuries,” said Gillie.

The shooting happened around 10:30 am at a home in the 2500 block of Arrington Bridge Road. Heavily armed officers from the State Highway Patrol, WCSO and surrounding agencies continued to surround a home in the area at noon on Monday.

Gillie said the suspect was still barricaded inside the home on Monday afternoon. Information on who filed the commitment order and what weapons were used in the shooting was not released.

Three Wayne County deputies injured serving involuntary committment papers

The sheriff’s office did not release the name of the deputies shot or say how serious any injuries to the deputies are. It is not yet clear who fired the shot.

It is standard for three deputies to serve an involuntary commitment warrant, Gillie said, and deputies did not have a history with the suspect.

According to the Gun Violence Archives, there have been six incidents in NC this year where an officer was shot and injured or killed. Nationwide, the database shows there have been at least 201.

Between Jan. 1 2019 and today, North Carolina has had at least 73 incidents where an officer was shot and injured or killed. That puts our state as eighth in the nation for these types of incidents over that period of time.

During that same time period nationwide, there were more than 1180 incidents. They’ve gone up over time. From 297 in 2019, 330 in 2020 and 360 incidents reported to GVA for 2021. At this point last year, there were 190 incidents reported so we are outpacing it.

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Flash floods close roads into Death Valley National Park

In this photo released by the National Park Service, is the damaged intersection of Kelbacker Road and Mojave Road in the Mojave National Preserve, Calif., Sunday, July 31, 2022. Roads in and out of Death Valley National Park were closed after lanes mud and debris inundated lanes during weekend flash floods in eastern California, western Nevada and northern Arizona.  Storm cells dumped localized heavy rain across the region, prompting closures of highways and campgrounds.  (National Park Service via AP)
In this photo released by the National Park Service, is the damaged intersection of Kelbacker Road and Mojave Road in the Mojave National Preserve, Calif., Sunday, July 31, 2022. Roads in and out of Death Valley National Park were closed after lanes mud and debris inundated lanes during weekend flash floods in eastern California, western Nevada and northern Arizona.  Storm cells dumped localized heavy rain across the region, prompting closures of highways and campgrounds.  (National Park Service via AP)
In this photo released by the National Park Service, is the damaged intersection of Kelbacker Road and Mojave Road in the Mojave National Preserve, Calif., Sunday, July 31, 2022. Roads in and out of Death Valley National Park were closed after lanes mud and debris inundated lanes during weekend flash floods in eastern California, western Nevada and northern Arizona.  Storm cells dumped localized heavy rain across the region, prompting closures of highways and campgrounds.  (National Park Service via AP)

In this photo released by the National Park Service, is the damaged intersection of Kelbacker Road and Mojave Road in the Mojave National Preserve, Calif., Sunday, July 31, 2022. Roads in and out of Death Valley National Park were closed after lanes mud and debris inundated lanes during weekend flash floods in eastern California, western Nevada and northern Arizona. Storm cells dumped localized heavy rain across the region, prompting closures of highways and campgrounds. (National Park Service via AP)

In this photo released by the National Park Service, is the damaged intersection of Kelbacker Road and Mojave Road in the Mojave National Preserve, Calif., Sunday, July 31, 2022. Roads in and out of Death Valley National Park were closed after lanes mud and debris inundated lanes during weekend flash floods in eastern California, western Nevada and northern Arizona. Storm cells dumped localized heavy rain across the region, prompting closures of highways and campgrounds. (National Park Service via AP)

DEATH VALLEY NATIONAL PARK, Calif. (AP) — Some roads in and out of Death Valley National Park have been closed after they were inundated over the weekend with mud and debris from flash floods that also hit western Nevada and northern Arizona hard.

Officials on Sunday provided no estimate on when the roads around Death Valley would be reopened.

Motorists were also urged to avoid Southern California’s Mojave National Preserve after flooding buckled pavement on some roads. The rain also prompted closures of highways and campgrounds elsewhere, but no injuries were reported

The storms produced torrential downpours and the National Weather Service reported that more than an inch (2.5 centimeters) of rain fell in 15 minutes Sunday near Kingman, Arizona, which is close to the stateline with California.

In a mountainous area east of Los Angeles at the edge of the San Bernardino National Forest, mudslides sent trees and large rocks onto roads, blocking them near the city of Yucaipa.

Forecasters said more thunderstorms were possible on Monday.

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Man arrested outside Iranian writer’s Brooklyn home with AK-47 a year after kidnapping threat

A man arrested with a loaded AK-47 assault rifle outside the Brooklyn home of an outspoken Iranian writer is due in federal court Monday amid questions about his intent.

Khalid Mehdiyev was charged with possessing a firearm with an obliterated serial number after he was seen lurking outside the home of Masih Alinejad, who was targeted last year in a kidnapping plot allegedly organized by Iranian nationals, according to the Department of Justice.

Over two days last week, Mehdiyev was seen in a gray Subaru Forester with an Illinois license plate in front of Alinejad’s home for several hours, according to the criminal complaint. In those hours, the complaint said, Mehdiyev “behaved suspiciously” by approaching the residence, attempting to look inside the windows of the residence and attempting to open the front door.

Police later pulled him over for failing to stop at a stop sign. He was arrested for driving with a suspended license, according to the complaint.

In the rear seat of the Subaru, police found a suitcase containing a Norinco AK-47-style assault rifle loaded with a round in the chamber and a magazine attached, according to the complaint. He also had $1,100 in cash and two other license plates issued from other states besides Illinois.

PHOTO: Khalid Mehdiyev was charged with possessing a firearm with an obliterated serial number after he was seen lurking outside the home of journalist Masih Alinejad.

Khalid Mehdiyev was charged with possessing a firearm with an obliterated serial number after he was seen lurking outside the home of journalist Masih Alinejad.

Southern District of New York

Mehdiyev initially told police he was in the area of ​​the Brooklyn home because he was looking for a place to rent and was going to knock on the woman’s door asking to rent a room. He also claimed he did not know there was an assault rifle in the suitcase, according to the complaint. He later changed his story and admitted the gun belonged to him and he was “looking for someone.” He then asked for a lawyer and stopped talking, according to the complaint.

The complaint did not identify Alinejad but she posted video of the suspect outside her house on Twitter.

“My crime is giving voice to voiceless people,” she wrote. “The US administration must be tough on terror.”

Last July, a federal court unsealed an indictment charging four Iranian nationals with conspiring to kidnap Alinejad for “mobilizing public opinion in Iran and around the world to bring about changes to the regime’s laws and practices.”

PHOTO: Masih Alinejad, an outspoken critic of the Iranian regime, was targeted for kidnapping in July 2021.

Masih Alinejad, an outspoken critic of the Iranian regime, was targeted for kidnapping in July 2021.

abcnews

Federal prosecutors said the suspects were directed by the government of Iran to conduct surveillance on Alinejad and lure her to a third country to be captured and brought back to Iran.

“You go to my beautiful country, you will be beaten up because you’re unveiled. … I launched a campaign against compulsory hijab, and that is why, actually, I’m receiving death threats,” Alinejad told ABC News Live last year after the kidnapping plot was revealed. [thing] that they were going to kidnap me, but that shows that they [are] frightened [of] me and millions of other Iranian women, Iranian men, who got united this time loudly sending videos to me saying ‘no’ to the Islamic Republic. That’s why they sent someone here in New York to kidnap me.”

ABC News’ Andrea Amiel, Gabriella Abdul-Hakim and Allie Yang contributed to this report.

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Stewart and veterans slam Republicans over stalling bill to help those affected by toxic burn pits

“They’re allowed to stay open past five,” Stewart said on the US Capitol steps Monday morning, joining burn pit protesters who have remained there over the weekend as the bill remains in limbo. “So my suggestion to this Senate would be when you come back, if all the members aren’t here, keep the lights on. Keep the doors open. And don’t leave here tonight, until you do the right thing by these folks .”

While Senate Democrats voted unanimously for the measure last week, Republicans voted against a procedural step to advance the legislation, effectively stalling the Honoring Our PACT Act, which aims to provide assistance to veterans who have become ill after being exposed to burn pits during their military service.

Matt Zeller, a major in US Army Reserves and senior adviser for Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America, also told CNN’s Kate Bolduan that Republicans should move to support the PACT act now, with no time to waste.

“We’re going to stay here until this gets done because we’re doing this for the people who have died. We’re doing this for the people who are dying,” Zeller said. “And we’re going to do this most importantly for the people who will die if we don’t do this now.”

A new vote is expected to occur early this week but not Monday night, according to a senior Democratic aide familiar with the matter.

Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer plans to bring the procedural vote — which requires 60 senators to advance — back up to consider early this week and offer two amendments sought by Republican Sen. Pat Toomey of Pennsylvania for a vote at a 60-vote threshold. If Republicans accept that offer, it could pass early this week — though any one senator can object and slow the process down.

Stewart has knocked the GOP for holding up the bill’s progress and for misinterpreting the proposal. He traded online barbs with Republican senators’ newfound opposition to the bill that they both voted for in June.

On Monday, Stewart addressed the feud.

“You can attack me all you want, and you can troll me online,” he said. “But here’s the beautiful thing. I don’t give a shit. I’m not scared of you. And I don’t care. These are the people that I owe a debt of gratitude to and we all owe a debt of gratitude to, and it’s about time we start paying it off.”

“Can we please not force veterans, disabled from their heroism and sacrifice, to stand outside the Capitol building, days on end, waiting on this Congress to do the thing they already did on June 16? It passed 84 to 14. Nothing changed in it,” Stewart said Monday.

He added: “Ask any senator, any one of the senators that changed their votes point to the section of the bill that changed that made your vote go from desk to no point to the section of the bill that’s filled with pork point to the section of the bill that is not being spent on veterans.

Toomey was one of a few Republicans who voted to block the bill designed to help US military veterans exposed to toxic burn pits. I defended his vote for him Sunday on CNN’s “State of the Union,” saying he blocked the bill because of an accounting provision in the language.

Toomey said the bill as written would “allow our Democratic colleagues to go on an unrelated $400 billion spending spree.” He has said he wants a vote on his amendment to change the spending categorization before he agrees to allow the bill to come to a vote. It’s unclear as of early Monday whether Schumer’s proposal will be enough to assuage Toomey’s concerns.

CNN’s Manu Raju contributed to this report.

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Judge rejects terrorism sentencing penalty in Jan. 6 case

Reffitt, a member of the Texas Three Percenters militia, became the first Jan. 6 defendant to go before a jury and was convicted on all five felony charges he faced. Evidence and testimony at the trial showed he drove to Washington with an acquaintance the day before the riot, bringing two AR-15 rifles and a pistol along with him. The jury found that he had the pistol on his hip as he engaged in a tense standoff with police at the West Front of the Capitol. Reffitt was pelted with less-lethal weapons and tear gas as he tried to advance up the steps, waving the crowd forward, but he never entered the building himself.

As the sentencing hearing stretched into its fourth hour Monday, Friedrich had yet to announce a sentence in the case. In theory, Reffitt could receive up to 60 years, but defendants are typically sentenced under federal guidelines to terms well below the maximum.

Assistant US Attorney Jeffrey Nestler said Reffitt’s discussions before and after Jan. 6 make clear that he was intent on carrying out his repeated threats to drag Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell from the Capitol building by force. In discussions caught on video, Reffitt was recorded referring to his desire for him to listen to the lawmaker’s heads bouncing down the Capitol steps.

“He was planning to overtake our government. He wasn’t just trying to stop the certification,” Nestler said. “He wasn’t done. Jan. 6 was just a preface. … Mr Reffitt is in a class all by himself.”

However, Friedrich said prosecutors had urged much shorter sentences in cases involving people who were directly involved in actual violence against police.

“You’re making recommendations that are way different than you’re making in this case — way different,” said the judge, an appointee of President Donald Trump.

Friedrich also said she worried that Reffitt would not be unduly punished for deciding to go to trial, rather than enter into a plea bargain with prosecutors.

“His decision to exercise his constitutional right to go to trial should not result in a dramatically different sentence,” she said.

Nestler also noted that Reffitt was convicted of having a handgun on his hip while on the Capitol grounds, which Friedrich conceded that was an important distinction from the other cases to reach sentencing thus far.

“Huge, huge… and does the firearm deserve three times the sentence if it was not brandished or used in any way?” the judge asked.

Another unusual aspect of Reffitt’s case is that he was convicted of threatening to injure his two children if they discussed his actions on Jan. 6 with authorities. One of those children, Peyton Reffitt, spoke briefly during Monday’s hearing to her urgent leniency for her father. She suggested that Trump was more responsible for the events that day than her father was.

“My father’s name was not on all the flags that were there that day that everyone was carrying that day,” Peyton said. “He was not the leader.”

Several times during Monday’s hearing, Friedrich suggested she thought Reffitt suffered from delusions of grandeur and that his decision to go to trial earlier this year was part of his effort to posture as a leader of those fighting the certification of the election.

“He wants to be the big guy — the first to try to storm the Capitol, the first to go trial,” the judge said. “Clearly, that’s what he wants.”

Reffitt’s lawyer Clinton Broden acknowledged that, at times, his client was at the forefront of the crowd on the West Front of the Capitol. However, the defense attorney argued that the angry crowd was determined to arise towards the building whether Reffitt waved them on or not.

“Those people would have come up the stairs regardless of Mr. Reffitt and I think we all know that,” Broden said.

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Manchin will talk to Sinema about supporting climate, tax deal

Sen. Joe Manchin (DW.Va.) says he will talk to fellow centrist Sen. Kyrsten Sinema (D-Ariz.) about supporting a broad tax reform and climate bill he’s negotiated with Senate Majority Leader Charles Schumer (DN.Y.) that would reduce carbon emissions by 40 percent by 2030.

Sinema has kept silent about whether she will support the deal, which needs the votes of all 50 members of the Senate Democratic caucus to pass.

The Arizona senator expressed opposition last year to closing the carried interest tax loophole for asset managers, something that Manchin insisted be part of the deal.

Manchin said he didn’t keep Sinema in the loop during his talks with Schumer because he didn’t know if a deal was possible, but he said he plans to speak with her Monday afternoon, when the Senate is scheduled to vote on a judicial nominee to Virginia’s eastern district court.

“I’m sure we’ll get a chance to speak today because she usually comes in [on Monday]and we’ll speak on the floor,” he told reporters.

Manchin said last week that he was “adamant” about keeping a proposal to close the carried interest loophole, which lets money managers pay a capital gains tax rate on the income they earn from profitable investments.

Sinema’s staff said the senator is reviewing the legislation.

Manchin indicated that he would likely vote to protect the budget reconciliation package from amendments that would alter it significantly, arguing that he and Schumer have struck the right balance after months of difficult negotiations.

“I’m just saying, we have a good balanced piece of legislation. It’s taken me eight months to get here. We’ve listened to everybody along the way,” he said when asked whether he would vote for amendments to change the bill, which would raise $739 billion in new revenue and reduce the deficit by more than $300 billion.

Manchin said he kept his conversations with Schumer close to the vest.

“I haven’t had any conversations with anybody during the process because I wasn’t ever sure that we would get to a finale,” he acknowledged. “I never thought that could happen. I wasn’t sure.”

He said he “never quit” on the talks, but added that he “didn’t want to put people in the situation where their anticipations and hopes would go up and back down again.”

“It really unfolded last Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday,” he added.

Manchin pushed back at Republican claims that the bill would cause Americans across income brackets to pay slightly more in taxes.

An analysis by the Joint Committee on Taxation, for example, shows people earning between $50,000 and $75,000 would see their taxes increase by 0.8 percent in 2023.

Bloomberg reported Sunday the bill would increase a lapsed tax on crude and imported petroleum products to 16.4 cents per barrel.

“We have to agree to disagree. My Republican colleagues are my friends and I’ve worked with them tremendously and I’ll continue to work with them in any way, shape or form,” he said. “But these are things we have all talked about in bipartisan groups. How can we start paying down our debt and take our finances seriously?”

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