Despite Supreme Court setback, DOJ pushing ahead on Jan. 6 cases

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Despite Supreme Court setback, DOJ pushing ahead on Jan. 6 cases
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The Justice Department is not letting a Supreme Court spanking derail its pursuit of those who stormed the Capitol on Jan. 6.

Violent insurrectionists breach the U.S. Capitol in Washington, Jan. 6, 2021. A former government employee has been charged with repeatedly submitting fake tips to the FBI reporting that several of his co-workers in the intelligence community were part of a …

The issue is witness tampering law and section 1512, which was written in the wake of the Enron document-shredding scandal to criminalize obstructing an official proceeding. “Out of respect for judicial economy, and to ensure a uniform and consistent approach before each judge of the District and Circuit, the government will evaluate its approach to 1512 carefully,” U.S. Attorney Matthew Graves argued. “Therefore, the government respectfully requests the Court hold in abeyance for at least another 30 days the question of whether any additional proceedings are necessary in this case.

He has completed a 12-month sentence for his misdemeanor convictions and has asked the court to revisit his obstruction charge in light of the Supreme Court’s ruling.President Biden has made the events of Jan. 6 a centerpiece of his presidential campaign, arguing former President Donald Trump prodded the mob’s attack to try to subvert the results of the election.

In 52 of those cases the obstruction charge is the only felony for which they were convicted. Of those, 27 are still in prison. The FBI said Mr. Amos used pepper spray against police officers and used the American flag and pole he was carrying as a prod to help shove rioters through the police line guarding the Capitol.

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